Similarities between Johann Sebastian Bach and John Cage don't exactly leap out at you. Both have an interest in numbers, it's true: Bach's music is obsessively, perhaps mathematically patterned, and Cage proportioned much of his music according to strict ratios and numerical schemes. But even this similarity is very much an abstract one: can you hear it in the pieces? No, not really. The music of Bach and Cage sounds very different, indeed. I don't consider this a problem, and love the music of both. It's just that they're not the same.
So I was extremely intrigued by pianist Francesco Tristano's bachCage 2.0 project, which promised to find some sort of common ground between these two brilliant, divergent musical forces. At Kings Place last night he presented an interlinked and conceptually driven programme of music by both Bach and Cage, bookended by an Introit and an Introit Remix by Tristano himself. A variety of electronic effects were superimposed onto his renditions of the various Cage pieces (In a Landscape, 1948; The Seasons, 1947; the Etude Australe VIII, Book I, 1974-5) and a few slight bleeps bled into his Bach too (the Partita no. 1 in B flat and Four Duets from the Clavier-Übung). But were there any real similarities? And did his own compositional contribution highlight them, or shed fresh light on either figure?
Unfortunately, the answer to both was no last night, and while the recital was beautifully presented and technically well realised, I came away as sure as ever that Bach and Cage were not the same. And the recital also didn't convince me that adding a sort of neo-techno avant-garde-DJ-style framing to works by Bach and Cage really adds anything to their music, however often you tap the frame of the piano.
Tristano's Bach playing, if taken in isolation, was mostly good, if not revolutionary in approach. The fast movements of the Partita were sprightly and melodically focused – sometimes a little at the expense of the lower parts – and the Duets were lively and conversational. I was less convinced by his handling of the Sarabande, which was on the brisk side, but that's a small complaint. The biggest problem with the Bach playing was how out of place it sounded. The Cage pieces, more heavily treated electronically, blended in to the concert's conceptual ambience – but despite some subtle echoey tinkling emerging from the speakers in the Partita's final Gigue, the Bach pieces were all rather more interludes than integrated parts of a whole.