Trevor Pinnock - Journey - Planet Hugill Blog
Journey, a 70th birthday retrospective - Trevor Pinnock looks back with infectious enthusiasm
Highly personal and very engaging
recital from the distinguished harpsichordist
On this new recital disc from Linn Records, Journey a 70th birthday retrospective, veteran
harpsichord player Trevor Pinnock takes us on a journey through 200
years of harpsichord music from Antonio de Cabezon to Domenico Scarlatti with
stops along the way for music by William Byrd, Thomas Tallis, John Bull, Jan
Pieterszoon Sweelinck, JS Bach, Girolamo Frescobaldi and George Frideric
Handel. The whole is played, recital-like, on the same harpsichord (albeit with
two different tunings), a 1982 model built by David Jacques Way of Stonington,
Connecticut and modelled on a mid 18th century instrument by the French builder
Henri Hemsch. It is an instrument that Pinnock has played for
the last 40 years.
At first sight the programme seems a trifle eclectic, but the booklet articles by John Butt and by Trevor Pinnock, reveal twin themes running through the recital.
Historically the programme moves from a generic entablature accompanying vocal music, through music written for non-specific keyboard to repertoire especially for the harpsichord. So we can trace the development of the harpsichord as a specific keyboard instrument. The other journey is rather charmingly Trevor Pinnock's own. His describes his first piano lessons with pianist Ronald Smith's sister, and how many of the pieces on the disc relate to his own development as a player. Byrd's The Carman's Whistle being discovered as a choir boy at Canterbury Cathedral, Bach's French Suites which he discovered via George Malcolm's vinyl discs, or the music of Cabazon which he learned via the great Colombian harpsichordist Rafael Puyana.
What holds this all together though is the vivacity and brilliance of Pinnock's
playing. The instrument makes a richly resonant sound with quite an appealing
depth of tone and we hear it in two tunings, meantone for the earlier music and
unequal temperament for the later. Working with this, Pinnock brings remarkable
range of colours to the music and never fails to engage. There is showy
brilliance where needed, in the dazzling Scarlatti for instance, and grandeur
too in the Handel chaconne (the longest movement on the disc), with a lovely
mellow grandeur and elegance to the Frescobaldi. There are some lovely
dance-based moments in Bach's French
Suite but a gravity too,
which takes you a long way from these dance origins. The disc opens with the
melancholy elegance of Antonio de Cabezon's differencias,
a composer whose own journeys through Europe inspired the programme.
But overall the feeling is of an engaging vitality, this is playing which
really draws you in. And it is playing which belies Pinnock's years, there is
none of the grand manner instead there is an infectious enthusiasm and joyful
sense of character.