Cançons i danses catalanes
  Federico MOMPOU (1893-1987) 
Suite Compostelana (1962) [14:46]
  Miquel LLOBET (1878-1938) 
Cançons populars (1899-1926) [22:15]
  Federico MOMPOU 
Cançó i dansa  No. 10 (1953; 
		trans. for guitar by the composer) [3:08]
Cançó i dansa  No. 
		13 (1972) [4:21]
          Joan MANÉN (1883-1971) 
          Fantasia-Sonata per a guitarra, Op. A-22 (1930) [15:13]
          Franz Halász (guitar)
  rec. December 2014 and March 2015, Großer Saal, Hochschule für Musik und Theater, Munich, Germany
  Reviewed as a 24/96 download from 
		eClassical
  Pdf booklet enclosed
  BIS BIS-2092 SACD [60:52]
	
  It’s been a while since I’ve reviewed any guitar albums; coincidentally, though, one of the last such discs to come my way was a Henze collection with – you guessed it – Franz Halász (review). He’s come a long way since he won first prize in the Andrés Segovia Competition in 1993, as a quick look at his discography will confirm. Halász is an active performer and music professor at the Munich college where this new recording was made. Michele Gaggia of Digital Natural Sound, unfamiliar to me, is credited with the engineering.
  
  Catalonia has always been fiercely proud of its distinctive literary and musical traditions, and this album pays homage to the region’s songs and dances. Federico Mompou’s six-movement Suite Compostelana, written for Segovia, is a special tribute to Galicia and its famous shrine at Santiago de Compostela. The technically demanding Preludio combines warmth and breathtaking virtuosity, both of which are superbly caught by Gaggia’s recording. The soloist is close, but not unnaturally so, and the acoustic seems ideal for such an intimate programme.
  
          In Halász’s hands Coral has a simplicity and soul that 
          is really quite affecting, and although it’s a lullaby Cuna 
          has a clarity – a robustness, even – that’s far from 
          trite or sentimental. Still, the gentle flourish at the end suggests 
          that sleep has come at last. Recitativo and Canción 
          have a languorous charm and Muńeira – which imitates 
          the almost comical sound of a gaita, a traditional bagpipe 
          – is inspired. As always, Halász’s playing is pin-sharp 
          when it needs to be – the high-pitched gasps in the latter piece, 
          for instance – but to that he adds flashes of good humour.
  
          Halász plays this music ‘straight’, with no striving for 
          effect, and his performances are more revealing as a result. Indeed, 
          this entire programme has a boldness, a strength of character, that 
          is very different from the more 'conventional' – 
          for that read 'stereotypical' – approach to such 
          repertoire. Some might argue that Halász is more about head than heart, 
          but is that such a bad thing? At least one’s able to hear how 
          elegantly this music is constructed, and that’s a real bonus. 
          The detailed, very natural recording – timbres are just so true 
          – certainly helps in this regard.
  
          Next up are Miquel Llobet’s arrangements of thirteen Catalan songs. 
          Taught by the great Francisco Tárrega he was a performer who would have 
          known the value of crowd-pleasers. As Walter Aaron Clark notes in his 
          booklet essay, foreigners wouldn’t know these Cançons populars 
          but Llobet's native listeners most certainly would. This collection 
          spans a whole range of moods and colours, the well-worn cadences immensely 
          reassuring. There’s animation in this music, too: La pastoreta 
          (The Little Shepherd Girl) is certainly fleet of foot and finger. Halász 
          is a graceful and intuitive player who really knows how to individualise 
          each of these vignettes. After that that impish interlude La filla 
          del marxant (The Merchant’s Daughter) seems both demure and 
          delightful.
  
          The miniaturist’s task is to evoke with economy, and that’s 
          exactly what Llobet does here. Halász - who plays a Matthias Dammann 
          - certainly has all the colouristic skills and nuances these pieces 
          require; indeed, there are moments in this recital where the spell is 
          so profound, the glow of his playing so cosseting, that any attempt 
          to scribble notes is quickly thwarted. Such immersion is rare in a recording, 
          and that’s testimony to the quality of both the performances and 
          the sound. In short, it doesn’t get much better than this.
  
          Based on two songs, Mompou’s Cançó i dansa No. 10 - originally 
          written for piano - seems keener and less effusive. That’s in 
          spite of the work’s supposed debt to Debussy and Impressionism. 
          Then again, Halász’s playing has a formidable focus that’s 
          likely to harden the music’s soft edges. In any event this and 
          the Cançó i dansa No. 13 make a strong contrast with all that’s 
          gone before; ditto the violinist-composer Joan Manén’s Fantasia-Sonata 
          per a guitarra. It’s not a work I know, but it has the virtuosity 
          one would expect of, say, a Paganini or a Sarasate; that said, it’s 
          surprisingly reflecting as well. A substantial and deeply satisfying 
          conclusion to a well chosen programme.
  
          Immaculate, penetrating musicianship, with a sound to match; magic.
  
  Dan Morgan
           twitter.com/mahlerei