All the music here comes from two related manuscripts,
only recently discovered. They were located in the library of
Count Harrach, amongst the collections held in the family Schloss
at Rohrau, east of Vienna (and home to an important private
art collection). Prior to the Harrach library being transferred
from Vienna to Rohrau in 1970, most of the music manuscripts
in it were sold. The significance of these two manuscripts was
perhaps not recognised at the time. One of the two manuscripts
carries the title ‘Weiss Sylvio – Lautenmusik’; there are 64
pages in the manuscript and pretty well all of the works in
it can safely be attributed to Weiss. The other manuscript is
headed ‘Laten Musik von unbekannten Componisten’ (Lute music
by unknown composers); this manuscript contains 65 pages and,
again, pretty well all can be confidently attributed to Weiss,
either because they are versions of compositions known to be
his from other sources or on clear stylistic grounds. Some pieces
from the manuscripts appeared in the anthology Klingende Schätze
aus Schloss Rohrau, issued by Cavalli (CCD 446) in 2005 along
with works by Angelo Ragazzi, Vivaldi, Francesco Alborea and
Gottfried Finger. Now we have premiere recordings of
more material from the manuscripts, most notably the Concerto
for two lutes. I believe that this is the first time that the
music for one of Weiss’s duos has been found complete. There
is other music here which was already known, though it turns
up in company with different companions as it were, in different
sequences of movements and so on.
The duo is a real discovery, a minor masterpiece
of counterpoint and harmony, and is played quite beautifully
here. Weiss’s music synthesises elements from the traditions
and idioms of both France and Italy, but it has a distinctly
northern European quality. One hesitates to speak of Germanic
gravity, but certainly a kind of seriousness of mind (which
sometimes topples over into a rather melancholic strain) characterises
many of Weiss’s compositions, and these newly discovered works
are no exception. At times one feels that like a certain important
(northern European) predecessor of his amongst masters of the
lute, Weiss - as a composer at any rate - might have been described
as semper dolens. Some of his slower movements exude
a kind of dignified pathos, as in the lovely allemande of the
second Suite in D minor here. Even when the music is more rapid,
as in the gigue which closes the first Suite in D minor, the
music never approaches the skittish or playful, having too much
an air of self-restraint about it.
In his booklet note, Joachim Lüdtke refers
to a poem in praise of Weiss by Johann Ulrich König (1688-1744).
Some phrases from that poem which Lüdtke doesn’t have occasion
to quote surely capture very well the particular qualities of
Weiss’s own playing - he was famous as an improviser as well
as a composer and instrumentalist. König tells us that “he plays
… so that the heart feels it”, and that his playing was full
of “pitiful loving persuasions” (my translation). Such a tone
is well captured in the playing on this CD and Hofstötter’s
work is grounded in a sympathetic understanding of the inner
nature of much of Weiss’s best music.
Any listener who has
enjoyed other recordings of Weiss’s music will surely want to
hear the ‘discoveries’ on this CD – not just because they are
discoveries but because they are fine music well played. The recorded
sound is excellent.
Glyn Pursglove