Bach, Johann Sebastian:
Präludien und Fugen aus dem Wohltemperierten Clavier
BWV 860, 887, 858, 853, 891
Dmitri Shostakovich:
Präludien und Fugen op. 87 Nos. 4, 14, 15, 17
Bernd Glemser, Klavier
Dmitri Shostakovich composed his Preludes and Fugues
after attending the celebrations in Leipzig in 1950
to commemorate the 200th anniversary of Johann
Sebastian Bach’s death. On the concert scene, this led
to the increasingly frequent practice of playing Bach’s
Preludes and Fugues from the Well-Tempered Clavier
in direct proximity to Shostavich’s counterparts. Here
Bernd Glemser does not follow an encyclopaedic
strategy, but developed a programme which takes a
dramaturgically motivated path and highlights atmospheric
contexts.
Bernd Glemser has recorded more than 30 CDs
to date. While the former pupil of Vitaly Margulis
was particularly closely associated with the German
Romantic piano repertoire and the virtuoso Russian
school, he most recently earned acclaim for his
recordings of transcriptions of works by Bach
(OehmsClassics 706).
Along with a full programme as an internationally
sought-after soloist, Bernd Glemser also indulges his
interest in teaching – currently as a professor at the
music college in Würzburg.
Kindred spirits
Bernd Glemser speaks with Marco Frei
Mr. Glemser, what relationship is there between
Bach’s Wohltemperiertes Klavier and
Dmitri Shostakovich’s 24 Preludes and Fugues
from 1950/51?
That is a very complex question. One can examine
them as a musicologist would and determine
structural relationships such as connections
between individual fugues, similarities
in counterpoint and so on. There are virtually
no crab forms in these Bach and Shostakovich
works, and naturally, there are motives that resemble
each other.
Can you give a concrete example?
The first four tones of Bach’s E-flat Minor from
the first volume and Shostakovich’s E-flat Minor,
No. 14, both of which I have included on
this CD, are the same – only the order is somewhat
different. I don’t think that is coincidental.
In my opinion, there is less resemblance in what
is meant to be expressed.
How so?
Bach’s personal faith always plays a role in his
works. He always wrote for the glory of God;
one cannot say that of Shostakovich, however.
I feel that religiosity in Shostakovich is only
important to a partial extent – but it still does
play a role.
Do you mean Shostakovich’s use of the church
modes?
That is an important point because he does use
sacred themes in the 24 Preludes and Fugues. The
fugue in E Minor, No. 4, is an example of this
religiosity; the first theme seems to have something
hymn-like to it.
In 1953, this theme reoccurred as the main
theme in the first movement of the Symphony
No. 10 – the so-called “Stalin Symphony”.
I think that in general, worlds overlap in Shostakovich’s
music – or even more, they collide. The
Fugue in D-flat Major, No. 15, is worlds away
from the Fugue in E Minor. This extremely dissonant,
“formalist” fugue is not compatible with
Socialist Realism in the slightest and can be
thoroughly understood as a political statement.
Also because Shostakovich returns full circle
to his avant-garde early works, which were
banned at the time in the USSR; I’m referring
to the Piano Sonata No. 1 from 1926.
In respect to this background, isn’t it astonishing
that Shostakovich – shortly before he
composed the 24 Preludes and Fugues in 1948
– was again subjected to a massive attack during
the course of the second Stalinist cultural
campaign, likewise on the grounds that he was
too “formalist”.
Absolutely. It’s amazing that Shostakovich had
the nerve to do that. This fugue must have
shocked listeners, and this is why I really think
that the 24 Preludes and Fugues were a good
opportunity for Shostakovich to express something
he would have never been able to express
in another context because it would have been
too obvious. He would have never composed
something as “formalist” as the Fugue in D-flat
Major, No. 15 in a symphony.
Because the symphony – in contrast to chamber
and piano music – at least since Beethoven
– is a public genre with “mass appeal”?
Yes. I think that Shostakovich could create a certain
amount of freedom for himself in chamber
and piano music. There’s long tradition of that.
Take Beethoven, for example. His piano sonatas
and string quartets were not written for a broad
public – and think about the declarations he
makes in them! In his symphonies, Beethoven
would have never included the type of advanced
material he used in his last sonatas and quartets.
The symphonies always had to reach the greater
public.
Shostakovich composed his 24 Preludes and
Fugues specifically for the Bach anniversary in
Leipzig. And the two composers were paired
on recordings early on. What was the impetus
for your project?
In the 1980s, when I was still a student, the Südwestrundfunk
[Southwest RBO] – at the time,
still called the Südwest-Funk in Freiburg – had a
concert series. On one occasion, Shostakovich’s
24 Preludes and Fugues and Bach’s Wohltemperiertes
Klavier were performed together, meticulously
sequenced and with various pianists. I
performed one of these concerts. The programming,
however, called for Bach and Shostakovich
to be performed separately, i.e. in different
halves of the concert. In this project, I wanted
to connect the two composers much more intimately
and not “musicologically”, i.e. according
to keys or motivic ideas. For me it was more
important to establish a sound dramaturgic sequence
– to find corresponding moods.
There are many important Bach interpretations,
and Tatiana Nikolayeva premiered Shostakovich’s
cycle as well as recorded it a number
of times afterwards. What is your response to
this “inheritance”, if you will?
I listened to Nikolayeva as a child. She does not
precisely follow much of what Shostakovich
indicated in the music – and I’m not talking
about the metronome speed, which is always
a touchy subject. I also have problems with
Shostakovich’s own interpretations, by the way,
because they are sometimes extremely fast. He
plays some of what I perceive as threatening or
dry with a lot of pedal and somewhat sweetish.
After all, he came from the romantic tradition.
I tend to avoid the pedal in order to bring out
the polyphony and counterpoint – also when I
play Bach.
What can young people learn from Bach and
Shostakovich?
One can learn from Bach that strict form does
not mean a lack of emotionality. A Bach fugue
can be just as sad as one of Beethoven’s dirges.
When one plays Bach, one must learn to articulate
feelings in various manners and fashions –
also from the technical point of view. In regard
to Shostakovich, one can learn about how to say
much with scant means. And just like Bach, one
can learn from his being, although one must
heed one thing: many of those who knew him
and knew of his hardships and conflicts are now
passing away. We may never be able to decrypt
many of the allusions in his music. Still, the existential
questions in his works remain audible
– giving them a similar general human significance
as Bach’s works have.
Marco Frei wrote his dissertation on Dmitri
Shostakovich. His book Chaos statt Musik –
Dmitri Schostakowitsch, die Prawda-Kampagne
von 1936 bis 1938 und der Sozialistische Realismus
was published in 2006 by PFAU-Verlag Saarbrücken.
Translation: Elizabeth Gahbler