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Mahan Esfahani - Bach: Goldberg Variations (2016)

Mahan Esfahani - Bach: Goldberg Variations (2016)

BAND/ARTIST: Mahan Esfahani

  • Title: Bach: Goldberg Variations
  • Year Of Release: 2016
  • Label: Deutsche Grammophon ‎
  • Genre: Classical
  • Quality: FLAC (image + .cue, log, booklet)
  • Total Time: 1:18:38
  • Total Size: 507 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

1 Aria 3:48
2 Variatio 1 A 1 Clav. 2:02
3 Variatio 2 A 1 Clav. 1:25
4 Variatio 3 A 1 Clav. Canone All'Unisono 2:38
5 Variatio 4 A 1 Clav. 1:08
6 Variatio 5 A 1 Ovvero 2 Clav. 1:33
7 Variatio 6 A 1 Clav. Canone Alla Seconda 1:09
8 Variatio 7 A 1 Ovvero 2 Clav. Al Tempo Di Giga 1:51
9 Variatio 8 A 2 Clav. 2:02
10 Variatio 9 A 1 Clav. Canone Alla Terza 2:26
11 Variatio 10 A 1 Clav. Fughetta 1:36
12 Variatio 11 A 2 Clav. 1:58
13 Variatio 12 A 1 Clav. Canone Alla Quarta 2:22
14 Variatio 13 A 2 Clav. 5:02
15 Variatio 14 A 2 Clav. 2:07
16 Variatio 15 A 1 Clav. Canone Alla Quinta. Andante 4:19
17 Variatio 16 A 1 Clav. Ouverture 3:05
18 Variatio 17 A 2 Clav. 1:54
19 Variatio 18 A 1 Clav. Canone Alla Sesta 1:36
20 Variatio 19 A 1 Clav. 1:13
21 Variatio 20 A 2 Clav. 2:02
22 Variatio 21 A 1 Clav. Canone Alla Settima 2:47
23 Variatio 22 A 1 Clav. Alla Breve 1:33
24 Variatio 23 A 2 Clav. 2:21
25 Variatio 24 A 1 Clav. Canone All'Ottava 3:42
26 Variatio 25 A 2 Clav. Adagio 6:45
27 Variatio 26 A 2 Clav. 1:58
28 Variatio 27 A 2 Clav. Canone Alla Nona 1:43
29 Variatio 28 A 2 Clav. 2:22
30 Variatio 29 A 1 Ovvero 2 Clav. 2:10
31 Variatio 30 A 1 Clav. Quodlibet 1:49
32 Aria Da Capo 4:11


The Bach performances of harpsichordist Mahan Esfahani are never boring and often fascinating. He has a way of using his instrument, here a contemporary version of a 1710 Thuringian harpsichord, to evoke a wide range of extramusical associations, and during a live performance of the Goldberg Variations, BWV 988, he offered as an encore not another piece of music but a reading from Horace. One may be forgiven for thinking that this much-anticipated Goldberg Variations recording, released as Esfahani began a five-year traversal of Bach's music at London's Wigmore Hall, gets away from him a bit even as it displays the utterly distinctive thinking of the performer. Start with the booklet, where Esfahani begins with a pointless defense of the veracity of Johann Nikolaus Forkel's account of the sleepless Russian Count Goldberg that gave the variations their name: Bach was said to have been asked to write variations that were then requested by the Count at his bedtime, presumably singly. The grand conceptions of the individual variations, explored by Esfahani in the booklet and excitingly realized at the keyboard, might be thought more likely to jolt the Count awake than to put him to sleep, and in general this is a Goldberg Variations that impresses more in its individual parts than in the whole. Esfahani speaks disdainfully of numerological interpretations of the score, which is perhaps understandable, but balance is as much a part of the score as distinctive evocative detail, and it gets lost in Esfahani's interpretation. Sample Variation 24, the canon at the octave, which Esfahani likens to "the grand ensemble of horns and strings" at the beginning of the Cantata No. 65, "Sie werden aus Saba alle kommen," BWV 65: it may be ringing and stirring, but it is less clearly linked to its surroundings, to say nothing of the snoozing Goldberg, than one would like. Nevertheless, for bold thinking on the harpsichord, Esfahani can't be beat; he may be slightly better live than on recordings, and this is certainly a major new statement concerning the Goldberg Variations. ~ James Manheim


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  •  wrote in 19:52
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