Digital Programmes
Lang Lang plays the Goldberg Variations
Start time: 7.30pm
Approximate running time: 100 mins with no interval
Please note all timings are approximate and subject to change
This performance is subject to government guidelines
What is it about Johann Sebastian Bach’s Goldberg Variations that encourages such extremes, such individual interpretations? Harriet Smith finds out.
And so many of them – not only is it a popular fixture in the concert hall, but there are to date over 600 recordings of the piece. And let’s face it, the idea of nearly 90 minutes of continuous music that rarely veers out of its home key – G major – might not shout ‘bestseller’.
That said, the Goldberg Variations need little introduction: the story of how they came into being (quite probably apocryphal, but undeniably a good yarn) is that they were written at the behest of the insomniac Count Kaiserling whose resident harpsichordist Johann Gottlieb Goldberg is said to have performed them to soothe the Count during his long sleepless nights.
Whatever the truth behind the commission, Bach responded with an aria of rare beauty on which he based 30 variations that show a technical mastery allied to an unerring sense of drama, despite the lack of key changes. There’s contrast between the strictness of every third variations being a ‘canon’ (one line exactly following another but never catching up with it) with an almost jazz-like sense of improvisation. It was designed for a two-manual harpsichord and Bach has great fun using the contrasting sonorities, marking the variations for one or two keyboards. One of the (many) challenges of performing the Goldbergs on the piano is how to convey this idea on a single keyboard. Yet at the same time, it is perhaps that very challenge, making any performance not on a two-manual harpsichord effectively a transcription, that has proved so irresistible to musicians through the ages.
If it was Glenn Gould who boldly claimed the Goldbergs for the piano back in 1955 (a marmite musician if ever there were one, though unquestionably one of the greatest of all musical brains when it came to turning Bach’s counterpoint into musical gold), he started a grand tradition that has welcomed not only pianists but accordionists, guitarists, harp players and a range of string ensembles too.
And among that posse of piano A-listers who have turned their attention to the piece, Lang Lang stands out for the sheer individuality of his performances and, as he has shown, the different ways he can approach the Goldbergs depending on mood and occasion, and whether he’s in a recording studio or in front of an audience.
Again, we can trace this tendency back to Gould, who made a speedy recording of the Goldbergs back in 1955, returning to the studio in 1981 for a reading that at the time seemed super-laconic but which, over the intervening years has come to seem positively mainstream.
Lang Lang’s own approach was described by one Gramophone reviewer as ‘the musical equivalent of a cinematic epic directed by Robert Altman or Steven Spielberg’. But that doesn’t perhaps give enough due to the journey on which Lang Lang embarked in order to bring the Goldbergs to life. Such is his extraordinary facility at the keyboard that he could probably have made a reasonable fist of learning them in a couple of weeks. But instead he spent a long time talking to experts in the Baroque field, not just great keyboard players such as Andreas Staier but also the legendary Nikolaus Harnoncourt, a major mover-and-shaker in the period-instrument movement, and a figure long at the forefront of rethinking how we approached Baroque music. By all accounts, when Lang Lang went to visit him in 2007 he found himself at the receiving end of some pretty forthright thinking. As the pianist recalled in an interview in Gramophone in October last year: ‘He didn’t want me to play the fast variations, he just wanted me to play the Aria, Variations 13 and 25… I played them in quite a square way… and he said: “Why are you playing like that? Horrible! This is absolutely the wrong way of even thinking about Baroque music. Are you crazy? Where is your heart? It should be the same as when you play Chopin or Brahms or Mozart. You cannot put up a wall between yourself and your emotions.”’
Wise words and something that Lang Lang has clearly taken to heart (and he and Harnoncourt clearly got along famously in the end, for they made a recording of Mozart concertos together). And we have the chance to sample Lang Lang the romantic tonight too, for he prefaces the Goldbergs with Schumann’s Arabeske, Op 18. Written in 1839, it has an artless beauty that requires true artistry to bring off, and a charm that only partially masks its underlying unease.
If the definition of a musical masterpiece is something that can take numerous different approaches and still emerge intact, then Bach’s Goldbergs are among the mightiest. Lang Lang’s relationship with the work is, likewise, an ever developing one, and it promises to be an endlessly fascinating journey.
© Harriet Smith
Start time: 7.30pm
Approximate running time: 100 mins with no interval
Please note all timings are approximate and subject to change
This performance is subject to government guidelines
Programme and performers
Robert Schumann Arabesque in C major, Op 18
Johann Sebastian Bach Goldberg Variations
Aria
Variatio 1: a 1 Clav.
Variatio 2: a 1 Clav.
Variatio 3: Canone all'Unisono. a 1 Clav.
Variatio 4: a 1 Clav.
Variatio 5: a 1 ô vero 2 Clav.
Variatio 6: Canone alla Seconda. a 1 Clav.
Variatio 7: a 1 ô vero 2 Clav. Al tempo di Giga
Variatio 8: a 2 Clav.
Variatio 9: Canone alla Terza. a 1 Clav.
Variatio 10: Fughetta. a 1 Clav.
Variatio 11: a 2 Clav.
Variatio 12: a 1 Clav. Canone alla Quarta. a 1 Clav.
Variatio 13: a 2 Clav.
Variatio 14: a 2 Clav.
Variatio 15: Canone alla Quinta. a 1 Clav. Andante
Variatio 16: Ouverture. a 1 Clav.
Variatio 17: a 2 Clav.
Variatio 18: Canone alla Sesta. a 1 Clav.
Variatio 19: a 1 Clav.
Variatio 20: a 2 Clav.
Variatio 21: Canone alla Settima. a 1 Clav.
Variatio 22: a 1 Clav. alla breve
Variatio 23: a 2 Clav.
Variatio 24: Canone all'Ottava. a 1 Clav.
Variatio 25: a 2 Clav. Adagio
Variatio 26: a 2 Clav.
Variatio 27: Canone alla Nona. a 2 Clav.
Variatio 28: a 2 Clav.
Variatio 29: a 1 ô vero 2 Clav.
Variatio 30: Quodlibet. a 1 Clav.
Aria da Capo
Lang Lang piano
Lang Lang
Lang Lang is a leading figure in classical music today – as a pianist, educator and philanthropist he has become one of the world’s most influential and committed ambassadors for the arts in the 21st century. Equally happy playing for billions of viewers at the 2008 Olympic Opening Ceremony in Beijing or just for a few hundred children in public schools, he is a master of communicating through music.
Heralded by the New York Times as 'the hottest artist on the classical music planet', Lang Lang plays sold-out concerts all over the world. He has formed ongoing collaborations with conductors including Sir Simon Rattle, Gustavo Dudamel, Daniel Barenboim and Christoph Eschenbach and performs with all the world’s top orchestras. Lang Lang is known for thinking outside the box and frequently steps into different musical worlds. His performances at the GRAMMY Awards with Metallica, Pharrell Williams and jazz legend Herbie Hancock were watched by millions of viewers.
For about a decade Lang Lang has contributed to musical education worldwide. In 2008 he founded the Lang Lang International Music Foundation aimed at cultivating tomorrow’s top pianists, championing music education at the forefront of technology, and building a young audience through live music experiences. In 2013 Lang Lang was designated by the Secretary General of the United Nations as a Messenger of Peace focusing on global education.
Lang Lang started playing the piano aged three, and gave his first public recital before the age of five. He entered Beijing’s Central Music Conservatory aged nine, and won First Prize at the International Tchaikovsky Competition for Young Musicians at 13. He subsequently went to Philadelphia to study with legendary pianist Gary Graffman at the Curtis Institute of Music. He was seventeen when his big break came, substituting for André Watts at the Gala of the Century, playing Tchaikovsky’s First Piano Concerto with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Christoph Eschenbach: he became an overnight sensation and the invitations started to pour in.
Lang Lang’s boundless drive to attract new audiences to classical music has brought him tremendous recognition: he was presented with the 2010 Crystal Award in Davos and was picked as one of the 250 Young Global Leaders by the World Economic Forum. He is also the recipient of honorary doctorates from the Royal College of Music, the Manhattan School of Music and New York University. In December 2011 he was honoured with the highest prize awarded by the Ministry of Culture of the People’s Republic of China and received the highest civilian honours in Germany (Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany) and France (Medal of the Order of Arts and Letters). In 2016 Lang Lang was invited to the Vatican to perform for Pope Francis. He has also performed for numerous other international dignitaries, including four US presidents and monarchs from many nations.