So you will play Bach in romantic way? Becouse you think its nice? Maybe it is, but then its not the same piece anymore. Its very ignorant to think that you can play without any rules. Ofc you play it how you feel it, but there are some rules and its IMPORTANT to know how the composer wanted the piece to be played and THEN think about it.
I don't know what you mean by romantic way! I would imagine that the way people played "Baroque" music in the "Baroque" times was much freer than we could contemplate, in our prissy, uptight culture where we childishly insisting on taking everything literally.
But reviewing in my mind the recordings of Bach I love, they range from the fantastic and free Edwin Fischer, the very romantic and passionate Landowska, the unique and exuberant Gould, the restrained but volcanic Richter, etc. They are all so different.
How can any piece have only one possible apparition? The very notion is ridiculous. And aspects of style do not have barriers between them.
One example I like to use is the Moonlight sonata. Andras Schiff, in a lecture broadcast on BBC, showed conclusively using evidence from the score alone that the correct tempo for the first movement is about twice as fast as most pianists have played, and still do, play it. So does that mean we should all run out and throw away our Schnabel, Paderewski, Friedman, Cortot, etc recordings? Are they so wrong that they made the piece unrecognizable?
Hardly. The music is strong enough that it contains poetic truths beyond what is written literally on the page. Schiff showed that they basically ignored the tempo indications. But their performances create such a powerful image that we have to admit they are also true.
While it can be helpful at times to know how a composer wanted a piece to be played, it can also be helpful to know how another pianist likes to play it. But any piece can be understood totally on its own terms, away from whatever thinking caused pen to be pressed to paper.
Walter Ramsey