NEW YORK, NY.- Few pieces in the piano repertoire are as revealing of a performer as Johann Sebastian Bachs Goldberg Variations. With few indications of tempo or articulation, they force constant interpretation. Its hard to think of a better personality test.
Except, perhaps, programming. A pianists choice of what to play can be more illuminating than the performance itself. A recital might focus on a single composer or group together a few sonatas; but theres also another route, more conceptual, of compiling something more akin to a playlist.
Over two evenings at the Park Avenue Armory in Manhattan this week, pianist Pavel Kolesnikov shared his artistry with both routes, with one concert devoted to the Goldbergs and the other a moodily nocturnal collage inspired by Joseph Cornells assemblage Celestial Navigation.
Kolesnikov, a Russian-born pianist who lives in England, is at 34 already a stalwart of the London music scene. He has recorded the Goldbergs and performed them alongside choreographer-performer Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker. But he has been virtually absent from New Yorks stages.
He shouldnt be. His two Armory recitals exhibited pianism of poetic freedom, assured interpretive choices and a DJs ear for subtle musical connections.
His Bach was boldly argued the kind of performance that invites disagreement but is defended so persuasively, even detractors cant help but appreciate it. His take on the Goldbergs, an Aria followed by 30 variations and a return to the original theme, was openly personal, the score more like a coloring-book outline filled in with a palette of Kolesnikovs creation.
In Bachs mathematical construction, the 32 movements are mirrored in the Arias 32 measures, which are split into two 16-bar passages that are both repeated a structure that recurs throughout. Like most pianists, Kolesnikov approached the first run of each passage straightforwardly, with a clarity that rendered the scores precise architecture in vivid detail.
On the repeat, however, he seemed to put that structure through a stress test. Near-constant pedalwork shaded phrases with anachronistic nuance. One variation might bleed into another, such as the closing G of the Fifth being held into the first measure of the Sixth, which starts with the same note; the Quodlibet variation emerged from a haze of sustained, hammered chords at the end of the 29th.
This was a reading of the Goldbergs too modern for purists of historically informed performance, yet also far from the slack indulgence of Lang Langs divisive recording. I didnt remember, until I returned to my notes for Kolesnikovs second recital, that I had described his treatment of the Arias return as Chopinesque which turned out to be just the word to describe his program Celestial Navigation (After Joseph Cornell).
Cornells sculptural assemblage a muted evocation of how humans have made sense of the night sky, with references to mythology and science doesnt exactly lend itself to musical translation in the way that, say, a synesthetic painting by Wassily Kandinsky would. But Kolesnikovs program is cleverly similar in its juxtapositions, unlikely pairings united not in aesthetic or time but in something loftier.
Its always refreshing to see musicians interacting with other mediums, and for Kolesnikov this isnt even a first: He has also put together a recital inspired by Marcel Proust. As a conceptual thinker he resembles pianist Vikingur Olafsson. But while Olafsson approaches programming like an essayist laying out a constellatory argument, Kolesnikov cultivates a mood. His performance at the Armory was a gathering of congenial poets.
At the heart of the evening was a trio of suites that followed a basic construction: an Olivier Messiaen piano solo, a Frédéric Chopin Nocturne and a fragmentary reprise of the Messiaen. Surrounding those were a Pavane by Louis Couperin (not the more famous François); Maurice Ravels Une Barque sur lOcéan; and Thomas Adès Dowland-inspired Darknesse Visible. Then, in the second half, Kolesnikov closed with Franz Schuberts D. 935 Impromptus.
Covering nearly 350 years of music history, these pieces couldnt possibly belong to the same sound world. But Kolesnikov nudged them as closely together as possible again applying modern pedalwork to the Baroque, and using Chopin as a stylistic anchor. The result was often disorienting; Messiaens colors shone more brightly, and Schubert leaned with blunter emotions toward the Romantic.
Kolesnikovs blanket dreaminess lent a memory-like remove even to passages of storminess and, in one of the Chopin Nocturnes, a moment of I could have danced all night bliss. These were idiosyncratic interpretations in service of a greater whole.
As in the Goldbergs, some of this could be seen as sacrilege. Maybe. What is inarguable, though, is that given two opportunities to reveal himself to New York, Kolesnikov came out and declared what kind of pianist he is: entirely, confidently, eloquently himself.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.