In a kind of High Baroque version of the duelling guitars from 
                  the film ‘Deliverance’, Alba have contrived to set Heinrich 
                  Biber and Georg Muffat against each other as rivals in a virtual 
                  virtuoso set-piece. The evidence for this is perhaps a little 
                  thin, but what is true is that both of these almost exact contemporaries 
                  worked for a while at the same time in the Court of the Prince-Archbishop 
                  of Salzburg. This period in the 1670s and 1680s gives rise to 
                  the not unreasonable speculation that there was a “rivalry that 
                  in all probability existed between them for the favour of their 
                  influential employer”, presumably with the ambition of ending 
                  up as Hofkapellmeister. 
                  
                  Heinrich Biber is probably best known for his ‘Mystery Sonatas’, 
                  and the scordatura or re-tuning effects used in his frequently 
                  highly virtuoso violin writing. The Sonata in C minor and 
                  Fantasia in D major are thought to be early works, with 
                  stylistic similarities to works from the early 1680s. Played 
                  with archlute accompaniment, and in the case of the Sonata with 
                  lute and organ, these have a rich sonority, and are pleasant 
                  vehicles for melodic variation and a certain amount of improvisation. 
                  Both have variation forms in second or last movement, the Sonata 
                  in C minor having a Passagagli adagissimo which allows 
                  for maximum exploration of a limited harmonic basis over nearly 
                  10 minutes. The Fantasia in D major is compact, but in 
                  its four movements is more adventurous in terms of thematic 
                  freedom, using a structure which approaches the ‘church sonata’ 
                  as a basis for free-form contrast building. The work with which 
                  the disc begins, the Sonata in A major, is thought to 
                  be a later piece, written while the composer was in the service 
                  of the Prince-Archbishop. All of the features of the earlier 
                  works combine here with a deeper experience of composition, 
                  with plenty of emphasis on lasting expression and harmonic inventiveness 
                  in the adagios, allowing for alternating sections of swift violin 
                  extroversion. 
                  
                  Played off against Biber, we have some of the organ inventions 
                  of Georg Muffat. Highly skilled as a performer, Muffat was also 
                  widely educated as a composer, and able to bring together influences 
                  from French, German and Italian styles. His publication Apparatus 
                  musico-organisticus published in 1690 is the source for 
                  the Toccata pieces here, as well as the Passacaglia 
                  in G minor. As you might expect, the toccatas are rich in 
                  virtuoso effects, with every kind of compositional technique 
                  thrown into the mixture. The Passacaglia employs a rondo 
                  technique in which the variations are structured around five 
                  repetitions of a basic refrain. At around 16 minutes this is 
                  the longest piece on this disc, but holds plenty of intriguing 
                  variety and invention, which only occasionally is overtly to 
                  do with sheer keyboard dexterity. With the final work on the 
                  disc we have the opportunity to compare like with like, Muffat’s 
                  Sonata in D major proving very much a match for Biber’s 
                  sonatas, and with more surprising harmonies if fewer violinistic 
                  fireworks. 
                  
                  This is a very fine disc indeed, with richly recorded instruments 
                  in a generous acoustic. The organ of the Church of St. Lawrence 
                  in Janakkala is a modern reproduction of the Baroque instrument 
                  in St. Cosmae in Stade, North Germany, and very fine it sounds 
                  too. There is plenty of rich bass, and the overall sound is 
                  rounded and refined. The ‘close to mean temperament’ gives the 
                  occasional authentic frisson of marginal tuning, but nothing 
                  about this recording or any of its instruments or performances 
                  are in any way hair-shirt. Petri Tapio Mattson’s violin playing 
                  is very fine, rather in the school of players like John Holloway 
                  and Andrew Manze, and not afraid of some extra colour and vibrato 
                  where appropriate. The support of both organ and lute is magnificent, 
                  resonant and restrained. The SACD sound is particularly fine, 
                  bringing what is already a very good stereo recording marvellously 
                  to life and adding extra dimensions in particular to the organ, 
                  which can otherwise become just a tad muddy through the richness 
                  of the lower notes in the CD mix. 
                  
                  Whatever your opinion about the concept of the title, these 
                  two composers complement each other superbly, and the Sonata 
                  in D major by Georg Muffat is quite a discovery. Does bow 
                  beat rolled-up score in this game of rock-paper-stok? Who cares, 
                  this is sheer Baroque delight. 
                  
                  Dominy Clements