This is the first volume in this established
                  series to have come my way and it encourages me to investigate
                  the earlier volumes - perhaps to be included
  in a future Download Roundup. If I had paid attention to the reviews of the
  earlier volumes by Jonathan Woolf and other colleagues, I’d already have
  known what to expect (see below).: As I was about to finalise this review,
  Jonathan Woolf has beaten me to the post again: his review of Volume 10 can
  be found 
here.
  It says all that I wanted to say about the Sonatas, so my detailed comments
  will be on the 
Tombeau. 
  
  After all those appreciative reviews, what more is there to say? My first encounter
  with the music of Weiss came courtesy of Julian Bream, playing the baroque
  guitar. That recording is still available on RCA Silver Seal, coupling a Weiss
  Suite in d minor with the Bach Lute Suite No.1, BWV996 and some shorter pieces
  by Bach, Sanz, Sor and Visée. Alternatively, the Bach, Visée
  and Weiss are coupled with Scarlatti on The Julian Bream Edition, Volume 9,
  RCA 09026 61592 2. Both are hard to come by; I can’t even find a current
  catalogue number for the Silver Seal - UK customers may need to import. 
  
  Bream was, of course, a pioneer in the rediscovery of the baroque guitar and
  lute repertoire. I wouldn’t for one moment wish to be without those volumes
  of the RCA Julian Bream Edition which I managed to purchase before most of
  the series was deleted, but modern performers such as Barto outshine him in
  one important respect. Though Bream seems to have captured the right style
  and to have empathised with the music from the start - the Silver Seal recordings
  were made as long ago as the mid-1960s - you have to tolerate a degree of extraneous
  noise, from fingers momentarily flicking the strings. 
  
  The miracle of modern performers such as Barto is the complete absence of these
  extraneous noises. I didn’t hear a single unwanted sound during the whole
  74 minutes, and that inevitably added to my enjoyment of the playing. Barto
  is not alone in this respect, of course; other performers, such as Nigel North,
  share the ability - see my 
review of
  his 
Bach on the Lute (Linn CKD300), which I made Download of the Month
  in March, 2009. 
  
  Barto’s rival in Weiss, Jakob Lindberg, also has the ability to combine
  absolute affinity with the music with a flawless technique. He, too, seems
  to be embarked on an extended series of recordings of Weiss for BIS and he
  has made at least one recording of his music for the Polish Dux label. (DUX0581
  - see 
review by
  Glyn Pursglove). I listened to his performance of the 
Tombeau sur la mort
  de M. Comte de Logy on Volume 2 (BIS-CD-1534), courtesy of 
passionato.com -
  a fine performance, which brings out the depth of feeling in the music, but
  which costs more than the Naxos, even in download form (mp3 £7.99, lossless £9.99). 
  
  Lindberg places the 
Tombeau in the centre of his programme; Barto concludes
  with it. I can’t say if this placement had any influence on my reaction,
  but I thought that he brought out all the pathos which Lindberg finds, together
  with an extra sense of warmth. I seem to recall that Logy had been Weiss’s
  teacher, though I can’t find confirmation in any of the books which I
  have to hand; if so, the relationship was personal and, in any case, the admiration
  seems to have been genuine. To say that Lindberg’s performance of the 
Tombeau is
  analytical and Barto’s emotive would be to stretch the contrast too far:
  both are good. Subscribers to the Naxos Music Library who would like to make
  the comparison themselves can find both albums there - the Barto 
here and
  the Lindberg 
here. 
  
  A third version of the 
Tombeau, from Hopkinson Smith on Auvidis Astrée,
  fine player though he is, seems to me not quite in the same category - not
  as focused as the other two. There are just a few of .those extraneous noises
  here, too. The programme as a whole is worthwhile, coupling the 
Tombeau with
  a Sonata in a minor, Fantasia in C and Sonata 48 in f# minor. (E8718: see also
  Zane Turner’s enthusiastic 
review of
  another Hopkinson Smith recital on E8908). 
  
  Barto’s tenth volume of Weiss offers a most entertaining programme, well
  recorded - close but not over-close - and, as usual with Naxos, presented with
  short but informative notes and with a cover illustration from a contemporary
  painter. I shall watch out for future releases. It joins a recent recording
  of the early works of Sor, played by William Carter, as one of the most enjoyable
  instrumental recordings to which I have been listening recently. That Sor recording
  is on Linn 
CKD343 -
  on SACD and a variety of download formats: expect a more detailed recommendation
  in a future Download Roundup. 
  
  
Brian Wilson
  
  see also review by Jonathan
  Woolf    
  Reviews of previous volumes
  Volumes 2 and 6 here
  Volume 4 here
  Volume 5 here
  Volume 6 here
  Volume 7 here and here
  Volume 8 here
  Volume 9 here