Prince Nicholas Esterházy, 
                the employer of Joseph Haydn, was a 
                passionate music-lover and played several 
                instruments, among them the cello, the 
                viola da gamba and the baryton, which 
                was his favourite instrument. 
              
 
              
Characteristic of the 
                baryton are the parallel six to seven 
                gut strings, which are bowed, and up 
                to twenty, though usually nine or ten 
                metal resonance strings running underneath 
                the fingerboard. The neck, open to the 
                rear, also allowed the strings to be 
                plucked. The tuning of the fretted strings 
                was similar to those of the viola da 
                gamba. The baryton was almost exclusively 
                played in Austria and South Germany 
                between the middle of the 17th and the 
                end of the 18th century. 
              
 
              
It was mainly Haydn 
                who carried the burden of composing 
                new music for this instrument; the Prince's 
                demand for such music was inexhaustible. 
                But in Luigi Tomasini he found a colleague, 
                who could share the load. Tomasini, 
                born in Pesaro in Italy, was first violinist 
                in the chapel of Esterházy, when 
                Haydn was appointed assistant Kapellmeister 
                in 1761. Later on he became Konzertmeister, 
                a post he held until his death in 1808. 
                To Haydn he was more than a colleague. 
                They were close friends. Several times 
                Haydn made efforts to improve Tomasini's 
                financial situation and called him "my 
                brother" in his letters. On several 
                occasions Tomasini gave performances 
                of Haydn's string quartets. Haydn once 
                wrote that nobody played his quartets 
                as rewardingly as Tomasini. 
              
 
              
Tomasini was also active 
                as a composer. Among his works are string 
                quartets and trios, a couple of violin 
                concertos and some symphonies. He also 
                wrote 24 divertimentos with baryton. 
                Whereas Haydn's trios are scored for 
                baryton, viola and cello, Tomasini preferred 
                the violin instead of the viola: two-thirds 
                are with violin. 
              
 
              
The fact that these 
                trios belong to the genre of the divertimento 
                doesn't mean that they are all light-hearted. 
                Some movements show close affinity with 
                the Sturm-und-Drang style, for example 
                the Trio in e minor. Elsewhere we find 
                the influence of the 'Empfindsamkeit', 
                as in the Trio in G and in some adagios 
                of other trios. The most divertimento-like 
                are the Trios in C and in A, which contain 
                three fast movements. 
              
 
              
As the baryton is hardly 
                ever recorded and even less frequently 
                played in public, this disc offers a 
                rare opportunity to hear the instrument. 
                It is also good to be introduced to 
                Tomasini as a composer, someone we only 
                knew from the history books as a brilliant 
                violinist and personal friend of Haydn. 
                In addition, the Esterházy Ensemble 
                gives excellent performances here, entertaining 
                where called for, and also exploring 
                the depths these trios contain. This 
                is a disc for adventurous music lovers 
                to whom I recommend it without reservation. 
              
Johan van Veen