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CR-065. The art of Samuel Feinberg, vol.1. Bach. WTK (3 CD) - Classical records - compact discs with classical music, CDs online shop.
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Samuel Feinberg
The art of Rachmaninov
Mikhail Voskresensky
Vera Gornostaeva
Mikhail Utkin
Vladimir Sofronitsky
Victor Fedotov
Maxim Fedotov
Henry Neighaus
 


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CR-065. The art of Samuel Feinberg, vol.1. Bach. WTK (3 CD)
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CR-065. The art of Samuel Feinberg, vol.1. Bach. WTK (3 CD)

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Weight: 300 g

The "Well Tempered Klavier" - famous cycles known to every musician and music lover, - is one of the highest acmes in the heritage of J. S.Bach. The first volume was written in 1722 in Kothen, the second was composed in 1744 in Leipzig. Each volume includes 24 preludes and fugues in all major and minor keys, set in chromatic order.
The music of the preludes and fugues is filled with high humanism. Human feelings and passions, philosophic meditations are reflected in these diverse and yet joint by the general conception polyphonic pieces.
"You can find here, - Anton Rubinstein wrote, - fugues of the religious, heroic, melancholic, solemn, pitiful, humoristic, pastoral, and dramatic character; there is only one thing in which they are alike - their beauty. And the preludes are charming, perfect, their diversity is wonderful" ("Music and its representatives")
In polyphonic structures with three, four or five voices Bach keeps the independence of each voice. The form of the fugue synthesizes all melodic lines.
The preludes in the cycle are often of the same importance as fugues. They are written in a more free style, as introductions to the strict features of fugues counterpoint development. Some of the preludes do not yield to the fugues by the difficulty of their polyphonic structure, while others resemble improvisations or have the character of a free lyric expression.
The significance of the WTK preludes and fugues for the future development of the music culture was enormous.
In these beautiful compositions, not only the secret of musical wisdom is contained. Until our days, the very style of piano texture in WTK gives rich possibilities for the very subtle, perfect performance and remains a beautiful example of the liveliest virtuosity.
Bach uses the possibilities of harpsichord in a new way. Many of the works from "Well-Tempered Klavier" resemble choir and orchestra ensembles, many of them reproduce the tenderness of the human voice and demand the most lively observation of frasing.
In Bach's times, composers mostly used keys with only a few sharps or flats. Other keys demanded a very careful tuning. Composing his preludes and fugues in 24 major and minor keys, Bach established a new way of temperation that was just coming in use - a method based on equal division of the octave to 12 semitones. That is the reason why the cycle was called "The Well-Tempered Klavier". It is also possible that it was Bach's intention to show the individual coloring of each key. For instance, it is quite impossible to imagine an elegant fugue in C sharp major from volume I in any other key with smaller quantity of sharps or in C major.
WTK was not published during Bach's life time. That is why a lot of work had to be done to restore the original text and clear it from later additions and alterations. The corrected text with the supplement of all versions known at the time was published by the Bach Society in the fifties of the nineteenth century under the editorship of Kroll. Some other additions were made in the eighties by Bishoff.
WTK, like all other Bach's works, are not just examples of high artistic value, but real art, full of life and emotion, that finds a broad response among those who love music.

Samuel Feinberg

From an early age until his last days the music of J.S.Bach was Samuel Feinberg's constant companion. His concert debut, which took place in February 1914 in a hall at Moscow Synod Institute (now the Rachmaninov Hall of the Moscow Conservatory), was the performance of two volumes of "Well-Tempered Clavier". And later, in the course of many years of giving concerts, Feinberg repeatedly played both "Well-Tempered Clavier" and most of other Bach's clavier compositions.
The issue of the style in which Bach's works should be played has a long history: arguments on how Bach should be played and how the composer himself played his music rage to this day and will probably never wane. Some performers seeking the greatest approximation to the style of that era use with the piano the register principles of sound control characteristic to the organ and clavier style. They try to achieve an irreproachable sonic equality within the limits of one episode and an instantaneous change of sound in the transition to another. They seek full metrical accuracy, and often refuse to use the pedal and to isolate voices.
Others consider that early music must be played on early instruments. They study the testimony of contemporaries about the peculiarities of the performance techniques of the time.
Feinberg put the question in another way: "How would the brilliant composer himself use the merits of the contemporary piano? It is possible that having familiarized himself with the peculiarities of our instruments, the author of 'Well-Tempered Clavier' would not have approved of the trends in musical restoration."Recognizing the legitimacy of these trends and the appropriateness of the use of "ornamental" interpretations for pieces and episodes in the toccata form, and delighted by the independent successes of outstanding performers using these techniques (e.g. Vanda Landovskaya), Feinberg nevertheless decisively advocated a lively method of playing Bach, a method that uses completely the rich possibilities of the contemporary piano - its sonic power, flexibility and expressive dynamics.
Using this technique Feinberg managed to achieve the utmost expressivity of play. He was able to convey a vocal expression of Bach's music through the most delicate nuances of timbre and dynamism which color not only each voice and each phrase, but sometimes even each note.
Great rhythmic freedom (especially in the interpretation of the cadenzas) is demonstrated by Feinberg first through exceptional expressivity and second, through the absence of impressive reasons to think that Bach did not in any way use this type of expression. In this regard Feinberg emphasized that a "lively", fully expressive style of playing Bach demands special creative tact and an ability to restrain oneself within the limits allowed by taste and style, and that the performance of Bach's polyphony is above all a system of the most delicate hues. And he commanded this arsenal of resources to perfection: he, like nobody else, was able to give the music a "special stamp" through details such as his characteristic modulation, style, dynamic shades of phrasing or nuances in motion. One of the reasons why you can always tell Feinberg's play from anyone else's lies in the uniqueness of these details, which are always extremely expressive.
The absence in Feinberg's interpretations of the usual canons sometimes scared away from him those who adhere to the "textbook rules". His play says more to the subtle expert and unbiased amateur than to the moderate follower of tradition. This is the famous mark of innovative art to which the future always belongs. This is corroborated by Feinberg's deeply spiritual and vivacious mastery which not only does not grow old but, on the contrary, becomes ever fresher and younger in our time.

Victor Bunin

Samuel Feinberg was one of the most important and refined musicians of the 20th century. A great pianist, an outstanding composer, a unique pedagogue and a musicologist, he became one of the legendary figures in the history of the Russian music culture.
Samuel Feinberg was born in 1890 in Odessa. Since 1894, his family lived in Moscow.
His outstanding musical talent was recognized rather early. He studied music with Alexander Jensen and later with Professor Alexander Goldenweiser, the meeting with whom became the turning point in Feinberg's artistic destiny. A wonderful pedagogue and outstanding pianist, he disclosed to the young pupil the secrets of virtuosity and a deep understanding of classical music. At the same time, Feinberg studied composition with Nikolai Zhiliaev (his first opuses were written when the young composer was only 11 and already attracted the attention of experts).
In 1911, Samuel Feinberg graduated from the Moscow Conservatory. For his final exam, he prepared a program that included all 48 preludes and fugues from Bach's "Well-Tempered Clavier". Even for the Moscow Conservatory, it was sensational.
After the declaration of the First World War, Feinberg was called to the army, but discharged after falling sick with typhoid fever in 1915. In that same year he gave a cycle of concerts and continued to study composing. His sonatas, romances, and concertos for piano and orchestra became famous in Russia and abroad.
In 1922 Samuel Feinberg became a professor at the Moscow Conservatory. In the course of many years he created his own piano school marked by a special virtuosity, and developed a whole galaxy of fine musicians: Viktor Merzhanov, Nina Yemelyanova, Vladimir Natanson, Ludmila Roschina, Zinaida Ignatieva, Viktor Bunin and many others. At the class in the Moscow Conservatory where Samuel Yevgenyevich taught hangs a memorial plaque in his honor.
It is no exaggeration to say that Feinberg was one of the most eminent pianists of his time. His concerts always evoked great interest among music lovers. Profound wisdom and great expression of his interpretations, enormous emotional power and intellect made each his concert unique. He played concerts in Russia and abroad; in 1925 he successfully performed at a festival in Venice; later, toured in Germany: in Berlin, Leipzig, Hamburg...
Here is an excerpt from an article by a famous critic of that time, Yevgeny Braudo ("Soviet Musicians in Germany", Pravda, 1927):
"Feinberg's brilliant dexterity and very strong musicality created an impression of something unprecedented and fresh for a German public used to less complex and expressive pianism."
The phenomenal musical memory of Feinberg became proverbial. He knew by heart and could play by the request of his audience any piano composition by Bach, Beethoven, Chopin, Schumann, and Scriabin.
He was the first performer of many works by contemporary Soviet composers - Prokofiev, Miaskovsky, Anatoly Alexandrov...
Samuel Feinberg authored several unique theoretical works: the book The Fate of the Musical Form, and the monograph Pianism as an Art, which has become reference books for many musicians.
Samuel Feinberg died in 1962.

© Classical Records

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