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Affectuoso : Virtuoso Guitar Music from the
Eighteenth Century
Rudolf STRAUBE (1717-1780s)
'Suite' for guitar (arr. Takeuchi) [14:36]
Sonata I for guitar & harpsichord [18:01]
Giacomo MERCHI (1730-after 1789)
La Follia di Spagna con Variazioni, for guitar* [15:49]
Johann Christian BACH (1735-1782)
Sonata for guitar & violin [13:01]
George Frideric HANDEL (1685-1759)
Menuet for guitar [3:16]
Francesco GEMINIANI (1687-1762)
Menuet Affectuoso, for guitar* [6:10]
Taro Takeuchi (Baroque guitar*, English guitar)
Judy Tarling (Baroque violin)
Terence Charlston (harpsichord)
ec. Holy Trinity Church, Weston, Southampton, England, 18-20 July
2010. DDD
DEUX-ELLES DXL 1146 [71:00]
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This is Japanese Baroque specialist Taro Takeuchi's second solo
CD for the British independent Deux-Elles, and unfortunately
a long time coming. Only those with long memories will recall
Folias (DXL 1050), as it came out a full decade ago!
However, fans of the Baroque guitar are rewarded for their patience
by this beguiling new release, in which Takeuchi, with some
valuable assistance in places from Judy Tarling and Terence
Charlston, offers up some rarities from the 18th century in
an outstanding programme.
The composers are linked by the fact that they were all active
in England in the eighteenth century. Guitar music had yet to
really catch on in the public imagination, but some composers
had already realised its potential for accessibility and intimate
expression, not least Johann Christian Bach, whose only work
work for guitar, gentle and genial, must surely have inspired
many younger composers and players. However, the bulk of Takeuchi's
recital is made up of the relatively unknown Rudolf Straube's
two works, but is none the worse for it - they are both mellifluously
idiomatic and memorable.
Giacomo Merchi and his brother Joseph both did much to promote
the guitar in eighteenth-century Europe; here Takeuchi - perhaps
to remind listeners about his previous CD! - plays a seldom-heard
but captivating take on the so-called 'La Folia' theme, which
was made famous by Lully and Corelli and used by more than a
hundred other composers, including Geminiani, whose strikingly
modern-sounding Menuet Affectuoso gives the CD its title and
brings Takeuchi's marvellous recital to an end.
Takeuchi's period instruments are two mid-18th century English
guitars (or 'guittars') made by Thomas Perry and John Preston,
and a French-made double-stringed Spanish Baroque guitar from
the same period used for the Merchi and Geminiani pieces. Tarling's
violin and Charlston's harpsichord are exactly contemporaneous
with these for total authenticity. The tones of Takeuchi's instruments
are delicately atmospheric and original, the metal strings of
the English guitars in particular imbuing his programme with
a unique charge. Takeuchi's innately musical prowess and poise
are finished with an endearing modesty that leaves the listener
both deeply satisfied and wanting more.
Sound quality is very good, although it may be said that the
balance is not quite right for the Bach Sonata or Straube's
Sonata I: the violin and harpsichord respectively are too prominent,
making the piece sound more like a violin/harpsichord sonata
with guitar accompaniment than vice versa. Minor quiddities,
however.
The booklet takes a genial retro approach to presentation -
all the writing in bold, for one (odd) thing - but is informative
and well written, the notes shared between Takeuchi and Peter
Holman. There is also a fine colour photo of the three guitars
Takeuchi uses for these recordings.
Byzantion
Collected reviews and contact at reviews.gramma.co.uk
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