So you talk past all my comments and questions, looks like we have to change mode now. I am talking about a traditional approach or "proper" practice, there is nothing wrong with interpretation and going beyond that but you should toe the line.
Yet the keyboard is not using human voices.
Is that your own theory? Sounds like it. Define the mutual exclusivity between "independent, interesting and important" vs "equally important".
A weak strawman argument.
An ebb and flow now you say? lol You still can pick and choose individual voices right and are not forced into listening to one part over the other?
Oh yeah because voices are better? The piano is an improvement over the control we can have but we still should pay respect to the old keyboards where the music was born from then you can interpret to your hearts content. One should know proper/traditional approaches initially before feeling brave enough to interpret beyond that scope.
OOO more ebbing and flowing? What do you mean "illusion" of multiple lines?
Make what easier? The ebbing and flowing?
Disagree, what is wrong with your ears? The piano can do a better job though equalizing lines so that they interact effectively. No one is saying you cannot bend what that effective interaction is but surely one should base it from a traditional perspective initially then go from there.
So we have gone through lots of intruments but avoided the keyboards we are talking about. This makes little sense to me. The failure of tone in a harpsichord merely pushes for the idea that equality of sound is a more desireable outcome. The volume of the harpsichord is not the only feature we look at when studying keyboard technique for that instrument and how one pays respect to it with the modern piano.
A good bit huh?
Only a few? Your opinion must have thousands of sources right? It is impossible to have complete equality at ALL times because of the nature of the piano. If you have a long sustained note near the end of a piece you have to play quieter as you get to the end so that low bass sustained note can interact with the final chord that is played clearly. Unlike an organ which can sustain low foot pedal notes at full force for as long as they like, with the piano we have to adjust with the decay of sound.
No one is saying that SUBTLE changes are not ok but it is when you straight out make one voice force its way to attention at the cost of others.
Easier to listen to what? Certainly not the combination of melodies clearly interacting with one another, you give more to one than the other how can the combination work perfectly?
Subtle is not the problem all the recordings you would present still toe the line to what is tradition they won't go ahead and obsess about small parts and over emphasise it. Go ahead and post some recordings with the sheets to prove your point, we will see how confident you are then.
If tradition changes over time where does the tradition go?
So you think that how we play Bach today is better than what the creator Bach visualised?
Examples? Bach's tempo markings were for character of sounds rather than an exact measure of beats per minute.
Have you tried to do vibrato on a keyboard instrument?
Hilarious, you sound very hurt in this paragraph. You persist in considering my stance is my own and an opinion. That is rather pig headed of you, maybe your strict sense of opinion cannot be swayed. Have you even studied Bach at a reputable school or just read it from a book and watched youtube videos?
Well, let's make sure I'm not creating a strawman here. Your argument is in two main parts, I think.
Part 1. Bach wrote the WTC (and I guess the Suites and Partitas) with the harpsichord in mind and wrote them so that the counterpoint would be clear on that instrument. Indeed the harpsichord by its nature makes the counterpoint especially clear because voices are automatically weighted equally (at least within similar registers). Therefore not only is there no need to do anything on the piano which the harpsichord cannot do (shape a phrase by changing dynamics over the course of a phrase, play different voices at different dynamic levels, change the overall dynamic except in steps as one might do by changing manuals); and not only is there no need to do such things, but you shouldn't do them because they cannot teach you anything interesting about the music and because doing so disrespects Bach's skill in making counterpoint work on the harpsichord.
Part 2. None of this is your own personal preference but simply represents long established tradition of proper Bach performance, taught in the best conservatories.
Well, I've argued against Part 1 already. You were unconvinced.
So let's go to Part 2. Is there really a tradition of playing all voices equally, handed down in Apostolic succession from JS Bach? As far as I can see, CPE Bach's treatise on keyboard playing says nothing about how to play fugues. There are of course no recordings from his time, and the piano was just being invented. But when might such a tradition of playing all voices at equal volume and using no pianistic resources have gotten started?
Probably not with Czerny, as anyone who would muck about with the actual notes of the WTC the way he did seems unlikely to abjure pianistic devices, but you can't be sure. Certainly not with Busoni, who was more than happy to use every possible option on the piano to turn Bach into a great Romantic. When you get into the 20th century, there's Rubinstein, who seemed most drawn to Busoni's arrangements of Bach, and so to a very painistic, romanticized version of him. Still, we can stick to those who played the actual notes Bach himself wrote....
Horowitz, for example here, from the 1940's
certainly gives different weight to different voices,
as do Edwin Fischer (1930's) here
and Dinu Lipatti (1950) here
If you go to more modern pianists, late 20th century or 21st century, I don't think there's a need to post links. You can find Schiff, Turek, Dinnerstein, Barenboim, and many others. None of them play with equal weight on all voices at all times. None of them (except Schiff) abstain completely from the pedal; all of them shape phrases and make non-terraced, gradual dynamic changes. I don't know. Maybe they didn't study at the right schools.
What there was, was a period early in the "authentic performance practice" movement when there was an academic fad for playing the piano as though it were a harpsichord. That was a relatively brief period and the fashion has faded. It didn't seem to catch on among prominent concert pianists. It was certainly not a tradition handed down solemnly from JS Bach himself, though doubtless its proponents thought that Bach would have approved.
If you think I've been unfair in my choices of pianists, please point me to someone who plays as you describe, with equalized voices and no pianistic devices. I've never actually heard a recording of someone playing Bach that way.
I totally agree with you that one should not make a wash of sound with the pedal, or turn a four voice fugue into a single voice melody and a three voice accompaniment, or hammer out each new entrance of a fugue subject as though the listener were too dense to notice it without that kind of exaggeration. And perhaps you are exaggerating a bit when you talk about *not* bringing out the subject at all or using constant, equal dynamics on all the voices and in spite of what you say, you actually find nothing wrong with the performers I've linked to or mentioned above. But if that's the case, you must have decided to read me as advocating some freakish, idiosyncratic over-Romanticized approach to playing Bach, which is not really there in what I've posted.
And no, I didn't study Bach at a conservatory. I'm absolutely an amateur. But if your argument comes down to "I studied Bach professionally so take it on my authority," well, I don't think that's a great argument.