“Nothing 
                  is more beautiful than a guitar save perhaps two….” so commented 
                  Frederic Chopin. Exactly when he said this is not known but 
                  it may not be too fanciful to think it was after hearing Fernando 
                  Sor and Dionisio Aguado playing guitar duets in the house they 
                  shared in Paris.
                No 
                  discussion on duo guitar playing can be complete without reference 
                  to the husband/wife team of Alexander Lagoya and Ida Presti 
                  who established themselves as the world’s premiere exponents 
                  of this genre.
                While 
                  the solo guitar may have suffered from a meagre repertory, the 
                  paucity of music for two guitars was even more pronounced. It 
                  is the beautiful arrangements for guitar duo by Alexander Lagoya 
                  that complemented the success of Presti/Lagoya, the greatest 
                  combination of their time and probably of all time.
                The 
                  review disc comprises both transcriptions and original works 
                  for two guitars. Sonatina Canonica (15-17) by Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco 
                  was written for Presti and Lagoya and in total, works by eight 
                  different composers are presented. These span the period 1867 
                  (E. Granados) to L. Brouwer (b. 1939).
                Christian 
                  Gruber (b.1965, Wurzburg) 
                  and Peter Maklar (b. 1964, Bottrop) 
                  formed the duo in 1984 when they both started studying at the 
                  Leopold Mozart Conservatory in Augsburg. 
                  In 1991 they were awarded first prize at the largest international 
                  competition for guitar duos in Montelimar, 
                  France, and on that occasion they also won 
                  first prize for most popular duo with the audience. The two 
                  guitarists have taken part in master-classes with Sergio and 
                  Odair Assad, Alvaro Pierri, Leo Brouwer and Angelo Gilardino, 
                  and in 1993 were awarded scholarships for the Villa Musica in 
                  Mainz. In the 
                  same year they both received sponsorship from the Yehudi Menuhin 
                  Foundation, Live Music Now.
                All 
                  things considered, the guitar playing on this disc is technically 
                  and musically excellent. To play “as one” is the ambition and 
                  objective of all who play duets and Gruber and Maklar certainly 
                  achieve this.
                Music 
                  inaccessible to a single instrument often becomes playable on 
                  two guitars, and in the hands of a master arranger a new dimension 
                  of excellence is often added. Probably the most magnificent 
                  recorded example of this is Alexander Lagoya’s arrangement for 
                  two guitars of Handel’s Chaconne in G major taken from the second 
                  Suite in Vol. II of the Suites de Pièces for harpsichord. 
                  (Baroque Music for Guitar- Presti and Lagoya- Philips 422 285-2). 
                  This is the apotheosis of transcribing and playing guitar duets.
                Any 
                  guitarist who has ever played Manuel Ponce’s Scherzino Mexicano 
                  (14) immediately recognise how beautifully it “falls under the 
                  fingers” and the highly guitaristic nature of this original 
                  composition for guitar- wrong! Despite all impressions it is 
                  surprising to learn that this piece was originally written for 
                  piano. Later arranged for guitar, it is this instrument on which 
                  it sounds superior.
                Aside 
                  from the original compositions for two guitars the transcriptions 
                  are generally sound. The one exception is Scherzino Mexicano 
                  by Ponce (14) This particular arrangement for two guitars adds nothing to the 
                  original for solo guitar and the rendition per se is 
                  rather dull and lifeless. Compare the version by Alirio Diaz 
                  (EMI HQS 1175)for solo guitar, and this point becomes even more 
                  conspicuous. One gets the impression that this piece was added 
                  as an after thought to “pad-out” the Ponce repertory. 
                On 
                  balance the dazzling renditions of Piazzolla [23], [25] are 
                  highlights of the disc.
                Representing 
                  technical and musical excellence in duo guitar playing, complemented 
                  by an enjoyable programme, this new disc is recommended listening.
                Zane Turner