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Antoine de LHOYER (1768-1852)
Duo Concertant in A major, op. 31 no. 1 (1814) [14:11]
Duo Concertant in E minor, op. 31 no. 3 (1814) [14:04]
Duo Concertant in C major, op. 31 no. 2 (1814) [15:35]
Duo Concertant in D minor, op. 34 no. 2 (1819) [15:14]
Matteo Mela
and Lorenzo Micheli (guitars)
rec. Baroque Hall, Seminario Arcivescovile, Ivrea, Turin, Italy,
13-14 January 2005. NAXOS 8.570146 [59:04]
Antoine de Lhoyer
is just coming into recognition as an important figure in nineteenth
century guitar composition, his work having languished in obscurity
in the intervening years. He was just as unlucky in politics:
having been on the wrong side of the French Revolution, he
spent 1803-1814 at a safe distance in the court of the Czar
in St. Petersburg. While there he tutored the Czar’s daughters
and, along with Fernando Sor, who also spent time at the Russian
court, inspired a vibrant and largely unsung interest in the
guitar in Russia.
The Frenchman’s
music is quite different than that of his Spanish contemporary. Sor,
though called the “Beethoven of the guitar”, is actually closer
to Chopin in writing short-scale works, some of which serve
well as exercises for the ambitious student. All of the Lhoyer
works with which I am familiar are multi-movement sonata-form
pieces written for guitar duo. This provides the space, both
temporally and in terms of having twice as many hands at play,
to develop themes and material at much greater length and complexity. The duos
concertants are rhythmically propulsive. While not based
directly on dances in the way we have come to associate with
later guitar-adapted composers such as Albéniz and Granados,
these works definitely groove. These factors make the prospect
of listening to a discful of Lhoyer’s works, at least for me,
more enjoyable than in the case of Sor.
The other significant
representation of Lhoyer’s work on CD comes in the shape of
two volumes on the Norwegian label Simax (vol. 1: PSC1119
and vol. 2: PSC1189), performed by guitarists Martin Haug and
Erik Stenstavold. These have proven difficult to acquire,
at least in the United States — I have only the second one. Until
that changes, Naxos’s work will be the way most listeners have
the opportunity to hear this composer. Haug and Stenstavold
on Simax play original instruments. The notes on the Naxos
release do not discuss what instruments Mela and Micheli play — important
information for guitar fans! — but they sound like modern guitars. The
sound of the latter, being brighter, fuller and a bit more
percussive, serves the music better.
I hope that, as
in so many cases, this is the opening salvo of a comprehensive
project by Naxos. As his works become more widely known, more
often and variously interpreted, I believe that Antoine de
Lhoyer will be seen as fully the equal, and sometimes the superior,
of better-known early-Romantic guitar composers. Bravo to
Naxos for getting this ball rolling! Brian Burtt
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