Nonesuch Releases Brad Mehldau’s After Bach II and Après Fauré on May 10

 Albums feature compositions by Mehldau alongside performances of works by Bach and Fauré that inspired them 

Nonesuch releases Brad Mehldau’s After Bach II and Après Fauré on May 10, 2024. The Bach album comprises four preludes and one fugue from the Well-Tempered Clavier, as well as the Allemande from the fourth Partita, interspersed with seven compositions or improvisations by Mehldau inspired by the complementary works of Bach—including Mehldau’s Variations on Bach’s Goldberg Theme. On Après Fauré, Mehldau performs four Nocturnes, from a thirty-seven-year span of Gabriel Fauré’s career, as well as a reduction of an excerpt from the Adagio movement of his Piano Quartet in G Minor. Here Mehldau’s four compositions that Fauré inspired are presented in a group, bookended by two sections featuring the French composer’s works.  

The album tracks Between Bach by Mehldau and Fugue No. 20 in A Minor by Bach are available today, March 14, here. And Mehldau’s “Après Fauré: Prelude” from Après Fauré, with a scrolling score, is available here. A complete track list and US performance dates are below. 

Mehldau, speaking of the “universality” of Bach’s music, says in his liner note: “The more you try to engage with him, the more your own personality becomes visible, unavoidably. You are not playing Bach—Bach is playing you, in the sense that he lays you bare ... The greatest choice you make at all times is not out of an absence, but from what is there, in its totality. Specifically, it is the constant choice you make in how to negotiate between harmony and melody.”  

He continues, “This is why Bach is a model for me as a jazz musician. In my improvised solos, I want to make melodic phrases that carry harmonic implication, and create harmony that moves in a melodic fashion. This is a crucial component in the storytelling.” After Bach II follows 2018’s After Bach album, which originated in a work Mehldau first performed in 2015—commissioned by Carnegie Hall, The Royal Conservatory of Music, The National Concert Hall, and Wigmore Hall—called Three Pieces After Bach. Two of Mehldau’s compositions from that program were presented on the After Bach album; his virtuosic third piece, Toccata, is included on After Bach II

Discussing the Après Fauré album in his note, Mehldau says: “If the sublime foreshadows our mortality, this music might communicate the austerity of death—Fauré’s as it approached him, but also the apprehension of our own. We find a kinship with the composer finally, in the form of a question that he tossed off into the future, to us. I have composed four pieces to accompany Fauré’s music here, to share the way I have engaged with Fauré’s question, with you, the listener.” 

“This format is similar to my After Bach project,” he continues. “The connections are less overt, but Fauré’s harmonic imprint is on all four. There is also a textural influence, in terms of how he presented his musical material pianistically—he exploited the instrument’s sonority masterfully, as an expressive means. So, for example, in my first ‘Prelude,’ melody is welded to a continuous arpeggiation, both part of it and hovering above it; in my ‘Nocturne,’ it is possible to hear the harkening chordal approach in the opening of Fauré’s No. 12.” 

Brad Mehldau’s Nonesuch debut was the 2004 solo disc Live in Tokyo. His subsequent nineteen releases on the label include six records with his trio as well as collaborative and solo albums. His most recent releases are a solo album he recorded during COVID-19 lockdown, Suite: April 2020; Jacob’s Ladder (2022), which featured music that reflects on scripture and the search for God through music and was inspired by the prog rock Mehldau loved as a young adolescent; and Your Mother Should Know: Brad Mehldau Plays The Beatles (2023), a live solo album featuring the pianist and composer’s interpretations of nine songs by John Lennon and Paul McCartney and one by George Harrison. Mehldau’s memoir, Formation: Building a Personal Canon, Part I, also was published in 2023, offering a rare look inside the mind of an artist at the top of his field, in his own words.  

1. Prelude to Prelude

2. Prelude No. 9 in E Major from The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book I, BWV 854

3. Prelude No. 6 in D Minor from The Well-Tempered Clavier Book I, BWV 851

4. After Bach: Toccata

5. Partita for Keyboard No. 4 in D Major, BWV 828: II. Allemande

6. After Bach: Cavatina

7. Prelude No. 20 in A Minor from The Well-Tempered Clavier Book I, BWV 865

8. Between Bach

9. Fugue No. 20 in A Minor from The Well-Tempered Clavier Book I, BWV 865

10. Intermezzo

Variations on Bach’s Goldberg Theme:

11. Aria-like

12. Variation I, Minor 5/8 a

13. Variation II, Minor 5/8 b

14. Variation III, Major 7/4

15. Variation IV, Breakbeat

16. Variation V, Jazz

17. Variation VI, Finale

18. Prelude No. 7 in E-Flat Major from The Well-Tempered Clavier Book I, BWV 852

19. Postlude

 

Brad Mehldau
Après Fauré

 Gabriel Fauré:

1. Nocturne No. 13 in B Minor, Op. 119 (1921)

2. Nocturne No. 4 in E Major, Op. 36 (c. 1884)

3. Nocturne No. 12 in E Minor, Op. 107 (1915)

Brad Mehldau:

4. Prelude

5. Caprice

6. Nocturne

7. Vision

Gabriel Fauré:

8. Nocturne No. 7 in C-Sharp Minor, Op. 74 (1898)

9. Extract from Piano Quartet No. 2, Opus 45 (c. 1887): III. Adagio non troppo


The Brad Mehldau Interview with Rick Beato

Hi everyone, hope you are all well out there! Rick Beato, whom I’m sure many of you know, invited me for an interview in his studio and we got to talk shop. I’ve been a fan of Rick’s videos for a while now, and it was great fun to sit with him and wonk out a bit. Here it is if you’re interested…
– Brad