Here’s a summary of the wonderful reviews:
ANDREW McGREGOR - BBC Radio 3 Record Review
A “48” firmly based on scholarly research into performance practice, yet offering something distinctly different, from a player deeply concerned with Bach as a composer of music full of beauty and emotional force. A copious and entertaining booklet offers an unusual depth of insight into Bach’s mindset, and the context of this timeless music, including an investigation of the word “well-tempered”. I would urge anyone to buy this…there are so many things to be learned here, from the playing as well as from the superb notes.’
JOHN KITCHEN - Harpsichord and Fortepiano, October 2020
This is one of the most carefully considered and significant recordings of Bach’s complete Well-tempered Clavier that I have encountered: stylish, expressive, authoritative and compelling, and with refreshingly individual touches. The finest compliment I can pay to these outstanding performances is to assert that the music, not the performer, always comes first.
BRADLEY LEHMAN - American Record Guide Review
Booth produces a stimulating performance on a harpsichord he designed and built. Along with his booklet essay, his work is a master class presenting new ideas about rhythmic profiles, tempo, and ornamentation. He demonstrates a remarkably effective formula for playing Bach on the harpsichord: pick a patient and steady tempo, install a very subtle rhythmic inequality into your brain, and then let the piece play itself out easily with intuitive musicianship. The inequality is so tiny that it can’t be notated, but when other players don’t use it the absence is felt (like making oatmeal but forgetting the dash of salt). The piece must be learned so well that there is no struggle or further manipulation. Booth is a world-class player.
CAROLYN WINTER - Capriccio Baroque
It’s impossible not to remain fully engaged through each and every work in this breathtakingly beautiful recording. Booth’s recording is as near perfect as would seem possible - the harpsichord’s voice has a wonderful clarity and fullness, the recording is crystal clear, and the performance exquisite and completely absorbing.
RICHARD MASTERS - MusicWeb International
The tuning, Kirnberger III, was devised in the 1770s by Johann Philipp Kirnberger, a student of Bach. As described in the excellent and comprehensive booklet notes by Booth, it features either a slightly “short” fifth (the fifth of a chord is tuned low), or a high third. The tuning is comparatively subtle – there is no bar-room upright jangling here – but it does have a distinct color in each key, something which is lost in equal-temperament performances.
The playing is excellent. Booth is not afraid to ornament when the Muse strikes him, but he does so with taste and discretion. The ornaments don’t slow him down, and they also don’t pull at the attention; they simply complement the notes Bach wrote, giving the score a bit of extra panache. In the slower, more inward-facing pieces, Booth desynchronizes the hands to great emotional effect. He also utilizes appropriate rubato to emphasize interesting chords and progressions.
This is a deeply satisfying account of the Well-Tempered Clavier. The thoughtful performances and the pleasing sound of the instrument combine to make this one of the best recent versions of Bach’s greatest pedagogical work.
DAVID STANCLIFFE Early Music Review
I find Colin Booth’s playing arresting: it does not trip off the fingers so as to make you feel it is all effortlessly easy – which it isn’t, as any keyboard player will tell you. There is an honesty and a translucency about it, and thanks to the exceptionally mellow harpsichord, my auditory nerves are never jangling as they are with some superfast keyboard virtuosos. Every note is considered and placed, groupings even within complex time-signatures are articulated interestingly, so that melodic shapes are never taken for granted and the direction of Bach’s fluid imagination is never prejudged.
There are not that many CDs of solo keyboard music that pay repeated listening at frequent intervals, but new insights are revealed each time I play a track: it keeps me alert, and I find that when for example I am looking at an instrumental passage in one of the cantatas I am now more attuned to the possible shape and phrasing of the lines than I ever was before.
So I am glad to have – and to be able to replay frequently – these intriguing performances. You won’t tire of them, and they will open your ears to new possibilities every time you play one. This is a more than worthy successor to Volume I, which I reviewed in December 2018, and has been well worth waiting for.
top of page
£28.00Price
bottom of page