Henrik Persson
72:44
Barn Cottage Records BCR 028
This venerable bass viol by the London maker Edward Lewis, which has been through a number of manifestations since it was built, including a spell as a cello, has been restored in 2020 to its original form. The remarkable survival of an original label dates it to 1703, while its elegant decorations undoubtedly ensured the survival of the instrument itself. Violist Henrik Persson has selected a programme of music which could plausibly have been played on the viol, including a couple of the now familiar Telemann Fantasias, music by that flamoboyant violist/composer Tobias Hume and less familiar repertoire by Benjamin Hely, Thomas Brown and Richard Sumarte as well as anonymous music from the Williamsburg Musick Song Book, attesting to the fact that some of the early American colonists from England brought music and their beloved viols with them. While Henrik Persson plays with complete technical assurance and a wonderful musical expressiveness, the star of the show has to be the Lewis viol, which, in its restored state, has an absolutely beautiful, rich voice and a freshness which it must have had when it was first made. Clearly, from its lavish adornment and its stunning sound, this was a prestige instrument, but just think how many such fine instruments fell victim to changing tastes and musical demands. It is a testimony to the art of restorer John Topham that this remarkable instrument was saved from adaptation and dilapidation, and to the art of Henrik Persson that it has been allowed so eloquently to play the sort of repertoire so perfectly suited to it.
D. James Ross