Short story long Tim…Thanks for that, Graham. I do not know Levit. Does he have anything on LP that you could reccomend?
… and as an aside to dear reader, by the end of this I promise to try and then bring this post back to capitulate to the original topic and relate what I’m going to talk about the identifying traits in musical performance as an example of what a high end system makes easier and for me a defining capacity for what I consider true characteristics in my definition of what is high-end gear.
So to recommendations for Levit Tim. As I am confident you get that there is no one pianist that is the best pianist in all works. There isn’t even a universally best pianist in a specific repertoire for me but I have a particular built expectation about what great Bach keyboard music can be and a big part of journey comes out of the last five decades in growing to understand the connection and the difference.
Tim with Igor Levit I find a kind of Bach piano keyboard player and Beethoven piano music that really does it for me. But obviously there are others who work using differing prisms who also do it for me. Great artistry I find is never that two dimensional.
So to determine if you’re going to resonate well with Levit’s approach I’m going suggest I can offer a comparison to other greats in this work.
The spirit and the differential gift for me in Igor Levit's take on Bach keyboard (and in Beethoven piano music for me as well) is the mesmerising way he has in his threading the singing line and letting it unfold in you in a kind of perfect arc… probably closest pianistic reference for me in the Goldberg variations (where Levit is especially recommendable) would be Murray Perahia. If you love Murray Perahia you’re very likely going to get Levit. I love the way Levit’s Bach is not extravagant…
If your ideal vision of the Bach’s Goldberg Variations more leant towards a more intense or heroic or audacious inner journey like you might find with Glenn Gould or Alexandre Tharaud (also among my favourites in the Goldberg) or if you like your Bach with another perspective I’d suggest you might still find Levit a very fine appreciation even if it might not be your ideal benchmark in this Bach for piano.
So with Levit in Bach there is more of a lit restraint and it’s a bit more an elevated journey of the spirit as opposed to being more weighted in a deep dive of the soul.
I’ve always connected to Bach for its more spiritual dimensions and Igor Levit is one of those pianists who transmit this to me completely.
The siren like singing tone unfolds and abducts and it lifts whereas some might also abduct but take you into the shadow lands instead. Better journey I think for Shostakovich which is a fitting place for the darkest journeys of the soul.
But there is light and shade in both Bach and Shostakovichs worlds, in truth many great works seem to tread the line between the two.
So if that realm of extraordinary grace and a singing elegance and fine restraint found in Murray Perahia’s Goldberg Variations is good for you then this spirit and grace is also what captures me about Igor Levit in Bach keyboard music.
I’d suggest Igor Levit’s Bach Goldberg Variations standalone recording is a great place to start.
With his relationship with Beethoven piano music there is a slightly different aspect of Levit that comes through. I love especially the Late Beethoven piano sonatas ( 28 through to 31) which are 2013 debut recordings from when he was 26… these are great places to discover if you are likely to especially resonate to this pianist.
For me the whole Levit Beethoven piano sonata cycle which is a later release and compilation is worthwhile but more if you are completely into his approach… in the earlier release you can just explore the late Beethoven sonatas on their own.
He fills his Beethoven with a bit more fire than his Bach, much closer to Gould here in terms of passion. His tempo is faster, he transforms to something closer to the way I imagine being inhabited more by aspects of Beethoven might shift his approach. The capacity to shape a perfect arc even if there are moments less conventional in his early and middle piano sonatas for me. I love the whole cycle but could just live with the Late Beethoven alone.
I feel Igor Levit is still on an upward trajectory and building his legacy, I’d be surprised if time doesn’t establish him among the list of (the many) pianist greats that we have been graced through the last century with. If you find you connect to these two recordings I’d suggest you might also further explore then his Mendelssohn and Liszt. Hope that isn’t a misdirect for you Tim, I know you understand exactly how personal our relationships with musicians are.
So back to the high end is it worth it topic… and how that relates to the discussion above.
For me I find the greatest attribute and test of any system as high end is that it makes the finest distinctions in music performances so easily and clearly discernible… not only in the theatre of providing sonic brilliance or in an extraordinary display just of sonic attributes (and although these things can be enmeshed) it is for me that a great high end system renders the fine distinctions and differences in music performances as every bit as revealed and easy to attain as it will in also revealing recording differences and so not be homogenising of either sound or performance… so not just hifi in sonically brilliant ways that may draw the attention to specific things but may then never connect through and render the great sounds then as great musical performance and transmit performance and artistry as utterly revealed for us in a truthful musically transparent way.
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