Some DVDs are self-recommending; i.e., they offer definitive performances by great artists. That's the case in this 1992 BBC-derived production of Tatiana Nikolayeva playing Shostakovich's Preludes and Fugues, Op. 87, a work she inspired and which the composer dedicated to her. They met in 1950; Nikolayeva a contestant in a Bach Piano competition, Shostakovich on the jury. Her playing of Bach's music decided the composer to write his own set of Preludes and Fugues, after the master's great work. She was only 26 at the time and in 1992, we see a grandmotherly figure, pudgy, hair in a bun, but also a musician/pianist of the highest order playing a work she knew intimately and recorded often. Furthermore, it's a work that arguably is the greatest solo piano work of the 20th century, a work in which Shostakovich laid bare his soul, writing some of his most intimate and moving music.
It would be futile to single out any of these 24 pieces as better than any of the others. They straddle so wide an emotional and pianistic canvas that one can only revel in each piece and listen again and again to discover the linking threads that Shostakovich used to create a work of such all-encompassing depth and drama. Nikolayeva so identifies with this music that one feels her way is the way it must go, that she penetrates Shostakovich's intentions and meaning. So she's as convincing in the innocence of the D-Flat Prelude as she is stunning in that work's whirlwind Fugue; as gracefully elegant in the B-flat minor's prelude as she is powerful in the granite-like opening of the E-Flat major Prelude. And some of the fugues are played with such intimacy and spontaneity that one might think she was improvising on the spot. A card announcing which work is to be played precedes each of the 24 pieces. The BBC studio set is odd but for the most part unobjectionable. Camera movements are generally unobtrusive, a good thing since watching Nikolayeva's facial expressions (terrific intensity) and hands on the keyboard add a special dimension. Great music in a definitive performance--can one ask for more? --Dan Davis
Customer Reviews:
Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 / 5.0
Beautiful:
Everything about this DVD is first rate. The compositions are masterpieces. The performer plays them better than anyone else. The film was made with patience, care, intelligence, and forethought -- it is interesting to watch without being distracting from the performance. As to the performance... it is beautiful. We are lucky this film exists!
Absolutement phantastique !:
Pour tous qui aime la musique de Nikolayeva, ce dvd est un "must".
Acheter immediatement.
Nikolayeva, master of masters:
When it comes to Shostakovich's Preludes Tatiana Nikolayeva is the abosulte master. One thing is to hear her performances, another to see her absolute dominion and mastership of everything needed to be a great concert master. You will see her flawless hands movements, her incredible fingering and how she can obtain crescendos and pianissimos pressing the keys all the way down. Old school, if you want, but perfect. On an subjective feelings I discovered her beyond the audible spectrum, although I have heard... more info
Shostakovich's 'Intimate Diary' Played by Its Dedicatee:
At the Leipzig Bach Piano Competition held in 1950 on the occasion of the 200th anniversary of Bach's death, Dmitri Shostakovich was the chief judge. The winning pianist was a 26-year-old Russian, Tatiana Nikolayeva. The two met and began what was to become a lifelong friendship. Hearing so much Bach so impressed Shostakovich that a year later he composed what became his Op. 87, the 24 Preludes and Fugues for piano, inspired by Bach's Well-Tempered Clavier which Nikolayeva had played so well in Leipzig. He... more info