The young Swedish 
                  guitarist Johannes Möller (born 1981) made his debut at the 
                  age of 13 and since then has performed in many European countries 
                  plus Canada and the USA. He studied with Roland Fridh and Bo 
                  Hansson in his native country and later earned a Bachelor of 
                  Music with Honours from the Royal College of Music, where his 
                  teachers were Gary Ryan and Carlos Bonell. This is his first 
                  solo CD but he has made several recordings with his father, 
                  flautist Mats Möller, who is also the producer of this recording.
                On this hearing 
                  he is already a mature artist with excellent technique and as 
                  recorded here produces so beautiful a tone that I had to dig 
                  deep in my guitar collection to find something comparable. He 
                  is also a stylish musician with feeling for the musical phrase. 
                  Inquiring readers should try the final piece on this disc, the 
                  old war-horse Recuerdos de la Alhambra, where the tremolo 
                  playing is absolutely spotless and he finds the right ebb and 
                  flow that allows the music to unfold naturally and alive without 
                  any superimposed accents or inflexions. This also goes for de 
                  Falla’s only composition for guitar, the Homage to Debussy. 
                  In Rodrigo’s contemplative Junto al Generalife he savours 
                  the beautiful sounds, while En los trigales mixes the 
                  swagger of the flamenco rhythms and a more reflective inwardness. 
                
                At the centre of 
                  the recital is the four movement Sonata by Antonio José, 
                  who was executed by Falangists in the Spanish Civil War in 1936. 
                  It is a many-faceted composition. The first movement has a certain 
                  improvisatory character with sudden changes of mood. The short 
                  minuet seems to be searching for a tonal centre while the third 
                  movement Pavana triste makes some efforts to get rid 
                  of the melancholy but ultimately capitulates. The final movement, 
                  though, is filled with rhythms and unbending energy. A fascinating 
                  composition that requires to be heard, especially when played 
                  as superbly as it is here.
                The almost contemporaneous 
                  Eduardo Sainz de la Maza, who was vouchsafed a much longer life, 
                  liked to explore the possibilities of tremolo, as in the beautiful 
                  Campanas del alba, a piece that should be heard more 
                  often. There is a sweetness of melody that bears a certain likeness 
                  to Tarrega. The tribute to the painter Toulouse-Lautrec is bolder, 
                  more syncopated but also imbued with a melancholy that reflects 
                  the personality of its dedicatee. 
                The recording team 
                  have caught Johannes Möller’s beautiful tone to perfection and 
                  it is a tribute to both technicians and player that there is 
                  not a single extraneous noise on the disc; rare indeed with 
                  guitar recordings. 
                There is a cornucopia 
                  of immaculately executed and artistically superb music-making 
                  on this disc which can be recommended, also for some rarely 
                  encountered music.
                Göran Forsling