Following on from my comments on the Goldberg Variations post, I just thought I would ask opinions on this. I am a big fan of early music and love to hear it played on original instruments. However as a pianist and organist I have no problems at all in playing Bach and others on the piano and modern organs. Firstly because I don't have access to a harpsichord or a baroque organ tuned to Niedhardt temperament but also because I think, especially with Bach, that the music is universal and Bach played on the piano takes on an entirely different character to the same pieces played on a harpsichord (Another example is Glenn Gould's CD of Byrd, Gibbons, Sweelinck etc on the piano) Seeing how Bach recycled pieces for wildly different instruments (Double Violin Concerto and Concerto for Two Harpsichords!), I find it hard to understand why people likethe late Gustav Leonhardt get very angry when people play Bach on the piano? The late and old Carlo Curley also mentions an episode in his autobiography also when an organ teacher and his pupils stormed out of a recital in Denmark when he played an organ transcription of Air on a G String.
I know Bach was not that convinced by Silbermann's early Pianoforte but I can't help feeling he would have rejoiced in the power and range of today's concert grand and one can't help but speculate on what he would have written if he had access to one in his time! Anyway I would be interested to hear from purists about this topic, especially when it would mean the limiting of playing these pieces to a fortunate few.
I know Bach was not that convinced by Silbermann's early Pianoforte but I can't help feeling he would have rejoiced in the power and range of today's concert grand and one can't help but speculate on what he would have written if he had access to one in his time! Anyway I would be interested to hear from purists about this topic, especially when it would mean the limiting of playing these pieces to a fortunate few.
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