Nothing about cellist Lynn Harrell's two all-Bach recitals last week in Grace Cathedral could be called ordinary, except for his insightful virtuosity. First and most strikingly, those performances of J.S. Bach's six highbrow Suites for unaccompanied cello, BWV 1007-1012, were presented as part of the four-month jazz festival, titled the 9th Annual SFJAZZ Spring Season. Then too, the vast space of the cathedral atop Nob Hill seemed an unlikely venue for solo cello music. To my surprise, this worked.
Harrell played three Suites each evening: Nos. 1, 3, and 5 on Thursday, and Nos. 2, 4, and 6 the following night. I particularly wanted to hear whether Harrell had found some kind of magic solution to the hideous problems within No. 6 in D major. As it turned out, that piece proved to be the highlight of his Friday program.
Harrell played the wig off the piece, as if it were just another brilliant romp, and the audience in the packed cathedral gave him a rousing, standing ovation. Then, in a charming gesture to the presenters, he played an unaccompanied version of Duke Ellington's In a Sentimental Mood as his encore — and that, too, most stylishly.
We don't have exact dates for the composition of Bach's Suites, but it is known that they were written in his early days in Cöthen. The best guestimate is 1720. They were fostered by an amateur cellist, who likely was never able to cope with them, for Bach set out to write a kind of didactic study that progressed from the relatively simple Suite No. 1 in C Major to the white-knuckle demands of No. 5 in C Minor — which calls for false tuning of the instrument ("scordatura") — and to the even more difficult No. 6. But when a player can deal with all six Suites, he has mastered the art of cello playing.
Each Suite is a bit longer than its predecessor, each gradually becoming more demanding of the fingers and endurance of the performer as it moves along. In the case of the Sixth, the technical demands are compounded by the fact that it was written for a five-string cello: the normal four strings (C, G, D, and A), plus a higher E string. So the cellist today has to make do with four strings while coping with a piece written for five.
Harrell played all of the Suites well, while tending to emphasize the special character of each one. His was not a one-style-fits-all approach, and blessings on him for that.