Program: #25-33🏆 Air Date: Aug 11, 2025
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Howard Bass (and son) with lute duets, and rare Baroque lute sonatas with Lutz Kirchhof (Johann Kropfganss, anyone?), plus concertos with Miguel Rincón and Il Pomo d’Oro.
I. Then & Now: Duets for Lutes and Guitars. (Jeremy Bass & Howard Bass) Bass 195269.

Liner Notes
The story of this father-son collaboration begins in the mid-1980s, when Jeremy, then a small boy, would ask to hold his dad’s lute, which he would gently strum. Decades later, as Jeremy makes his own mark as a musician and Howard’s long career draws to a close, this album’s repertoire—from lute duets of the 16th century to contemporary guitar duets by David del Puerto and Leo Brouwer—displays Jeremy and Howard’s diverse musical interests and passions.
From the brilliance of one of the first master lutenists, Francesco Canova da Milano, and the lively back-and-forth of Elizabethan-era lute duets, to music composed and arranged for two guitars (including the first recording of David del Puerto’s “Diciembre,” dedicated to Jeremy and Howard), here is music we love to play. We hope you’ll love listening! -HB
In his nearly six-decade career as a musician, Howard Bass has performed and recorded with Trio Sefardi, La Rondinella, the Baltimore Consort, HESPERUS, Flory Jagoda, Barbara Hollinshead, and the Smithsonian Chamber Players, among others. He was a program producer at the Smithsonian Institution for three decades, where he also produced several recordings for the Smithsonian Folkways label. https://triosefardi.com/
Jeremy Bass holds three postgraduate performance degrees (MM, Classical Guitar, Columbus State University; DMA, Classical Guitar, University of Kentucky; MM, Lute/Theorbo, Koninklijk Conservatorium Den Haag), and was the recipient of a Fulbright scholarship (Universidad Complutense de Madrid). He is a member of Suspirium and Sibila ensembles and plays regularly with Cantate Karavaan and many others. He served two years in the Peace Corps, in Ecuador, following his graduation from Virginia Commonwealth University. https://www.jeremyandrewbass.com/
The Lute Music
Lutes were played in pairs already by the end of the 15th century, with one player–the so-called tenorista–playing the tune, and the other playing a virtuosic upper part. Although the earliest of this music has been lost or was maybe never written down in the first place, Francesco da Milano’s La Spagna appears to come from this tradition. Francesco was called “il divino” by his contemporaries, and the influence of his many fantasies and ricercars is evident in their appearance across Europe in numerous manuscripts and publications, and in the style of lute music well into the 17th century.
One devotee of il divino was the Flemish musician Johannes Matelart, who published several of Francesco’s fantasias with an additional part added by Matelart himself. These duets, with their intricate counterpoint, show how the lute duet was developing towards greater equality between the two parts.
Pierre Phalese, another Flemish musician in whose publications works by Francesco appear, printed several intabulations of songs and dances of Italian origin for lutes at different pitches. We recorded some of these on a vihuela in A and a lute (or what Juan Bermudo called in his 1555 treatise the “vihuela of Flanders”) in G. I play a short solo fantasia by Luis de Narváez from the same publication, Theatrum Musicum. In 2023, I had the good fortune of examining and playing from an original edition of the Theatrum housed at the Nederlands Muziek Instituut in The Hague. The research presented by Jan W.J. Burgers in his monumental work The Lute Music Published by Pierre Phalese was invaluable in identifying the composers and source material for this portion of the album.Â
Howard Bass and I are hardly the first father-and-son lute duo. At the Elizabethan court, two famous lute players, John Dowland and John Johnson each had a lute-playing son named Robert, and also composed lute duets. Coincidence? I think not. We include several of these beautiful pieces on our album, as well as Robert Johnson’s only known solo fantasy, a late example of the genre that Francesco da Milano perfected several generations prior.
Some of the lute duets we recorded are for instruments tuned a step apart. As with many instrument families during the Renaissance era, lute sizing generally followed the consort principle*. That is to say, there were bass, tenor, alto, and soprano (or descant) lutes. Sometimes all four lutes played together, but duos and trios were more common. After all, the tuning gets rather complicated with so many strings!
The tenor lute–neither too big nor too small–is the usual instrument for solo playing. The alto lute is pitched a step higher. Its smaller size makes it apt for playing fast runs in the higher register, with the tenor lute holding down the bass line, and the two instruments blending in the mid-range.
Several years ago, I bought a beautiful 6-course alto lute from Alexander Hopkins, in part to be able to play with my dad. The limitations of air travel being what they are, we decided to borrow instruments that I had played before from friends. Alto lutes are in short supply in the DC area, but Michael Stover happens to own an alto vihuela made by the renowned Basel-based Spanish luthier Lourdes Uncilla. Uncilla belongs to a pioneering generation of luthiers in Spain who lent their sound to the recordings of Jordi Savall, José Miguel Moreno, and many others. Working in close collaboration with professional musicians, Uncilla developed a reputation for exceptionally playable instruments that are lightly-built and capable of a wide range of dynamics and colors.
Purists may note the unorthodox combination of the round-backed, pear-shaped lute and the vihuela, with its flat back and guitaresque figure-8 shape. However, the setup of these two instruments (in terms of double strings, tied frets, and sizing) was identical throughout the 16th century, and their co-existence is well-documented. Two books of Francesco da Milano’s lute music are intended for “viola overo lauto” (in reference to the Italian variant of flat-backed lute, the viola da mano). Lutenists traveled to Spain from other parts of Europe and Spanish vihuelistas (or at least Luis de Narváez) traveled throughout Europe. The books of the vihuelistas include numerous intabulations of the most popular Franco-Flemish pieces, and music by the vihuelistas (including a fantasia by Narváez included on Then & Now) also appears in foreign publications. Miguel de Cervantes humorously compares the lute and the vihuela in a passage in which Don Quixote asks for a lute to serenade a lady, and is handed a vihuela instead. -JB
*This was a response to the predominant form of music composition at the time: vocal polyphony, in which voices of different pitch (often in something approximating the familiar SATB format) sang in counterpoint to one another.Â
The Guitar Music
The Segovia Effect
Andrés Segovia, born in Jaén, Spain, in 1893, was the greatest guitarist of the 20th century. Through his concerts, recordings, master classes, and transcriptions Segovia brought the classical guitar out of the parlors of the 18th and 19thcenturies and onto the concert stage the world over; his influence cannot be overstated. Segovia’s first public performance was in 1909 in Grenada, Spain, the start of a career that lasted for much of the twentieth century.
Segovia broadened the repertoire for the guitar through transcriptions of music originally composed for piano and the lute, and he worked with several composers, including Manuel M. Ponce, Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco, John Duarte, and Alexander Tansman, to expand significantly the repertoire for classical guitar. His master classes in Siena, Italy, and Santiago de Compostela, Spain, created a cadre of talented guitarists, many of whom also became teachers (including John Marlow and José Tomás, with whom Howard studied). As far as we know, Segovia composed just a bare handful of pieces for guitar, including the duet heard on our recording.
Before Segovia, the guitar was not thought of as an instrument for the concert hall, and while many guitarists composed studies and exercises, there was no real pedagogical methodology. Because of Segovia, there are now guitar programs in music conservatories, colleges, and universities all over the world, and one can attend concerts in major venues around the globe. In addition, many musicians who started with classical guitar took up the lute, and Segovia’s influence in the popularity of early music must be acknowledged as well.
Segovia once said, “When I began, the guitar was enclosed in a vicious circle. There were no composers writing for the guitar because there were no virtuoso guitarists.” And: “Lean your body forward slightly to support the guitar against your chest, for the poetry of the music should resound in your heart.” Guitarists (and many lutenists) owe a debt beyond measure and heartfelt thanks to Andrés Segovia. Music lovers everywhere are the beneficiaries of his legacy. -HB
Ferdinand Rebay (1880-1953), the arranger of the piano pieces by Max Reger on this album, has been recently rediscovered by the guitar world, and is now acknowledged as one of the most prolific composers of the twentieth century for the instrument. Andrés Segovia did much to emphasize the Spanish heritage of the classical guitar, and his influence tended to eclipse the presence of other traditions. Rebay’s native Vienna, however, had been one of the centers (along with Paris) of a golden age of the guitar in the early nineteenth century. The virtuoso guitarist-composer Mauro Giuliani premiered his first guitar concerto there in 1808, while Franz Schubert played guitar, and had some of his lieder published in versions with guitar accompaniment. That early spark of popularity led to the establishment of an important tradition guitar playing that carried through to the first half of the twentieth century, when Rebay’s niece, Gerta Hammerschmied entered the guitar studio of Jacob Ortner at the Wiener Musikakademie. Rebay was a professor of composition there, and soon began to compose and arrange for his niece and other guitarists in Ortner’s circle. He did so enthusiastically, producing many ambitious works for the instrument, with a special emphasis on chamber music. In his original compositions, he favored a late- Romantic style owing much to the models of Schubert (He was the president of the Wiener Schubertbundes for several years), Schumann, Brahms, and Bruckner. That proclivity naturally carried over into his arranging, so it is no surprise that he would choose to arrange a selection of movements from Max Reger’s Aus der Jugendzeit. Reger, after all, was a near-contemporary of Rebay’s, and this suite was clearly influenced by Robert Schumann’s famous Kinderszenen.
Leo Brouwer’s Música incidental campesina and arrangements of Beatles songs form an important part of the guitar portion of Then & Now. For devotees of the classical guitar, Brouwer–one of Cuba’s most famous musicians–needs no introduction. Distinguished composer, conductor, and guitarist, Brouwer’s professional career began in the 1950s when he was still a teenager. Today’s classical guitar world would be unimaginable without his contribution, which spans from studies for beginners to concertos for guitar and orchestra, and from arrangements of folk and popular music to experimental avant-garde compositions.
However, we chose to include Brouwer’s music on our album not because of his stature, but because we love it. Brouwer really knows how to make the guitar sing, and among the many virtues of his music is that it often sounds harder than it is. When I was starting to play classical guitar as a teenager, one of the first pieces of music I received from my dad was Brouwer’s El Decamerón Negro, a favorite of his that he first heard Berta Rojas play. This piece eventually became a cornerstone of my early concert repertoire. Brouwer’s guitar music has been a constant companion for me over the years, whether I’m teaching one of his studies, performing one of his concert pieces, or simply playing for my own enjoyment.
Then & Now features the world premiere recording of Diciembre, written for us by the great Spanish composer David del Puerto. My association with David goes back over ten years. I heard some of his guitar music on Eugenio Tobalina’s album Mirada, and decided I wanted to play something by him. He had already composed quite a lot for the guitar, and I was having trouble deciding what to play. So I wrote David an email asking for advice: maybe I should play the two preludes or the six studies? (These seemed like a good place to start.) To my surprise and delight, he responded right away, saying that if I wanted to play the studies (Seis estudios), it would be their first performance as a complete set. Around that time, I was going to begin my doctorate at the University of Kentucky, and I decided that the 6 Estudios would be a perfect addition to my first doctoral recital. That was the beginning of a long and fruitful collaboration with David that would include numerous other premieres (often together with wonderful chamber music partners), a thesis on the guitar sonatas, a recording of the 1st volume of said sonatas (with a 2nd in the works), a Fulbright grant, and of course a recording of Diciembre. —JB
- Lord Willougby's Welcome Home
Jeremy Bass - A Fancy
Jeremy Bass - Flatt Pavin and Galliard
Jeremy Bass - Canon for 2 Lutes
Jeremy Bass - Fantasia Sexta
Jeremy Bass - Fantasia Terza
Jeremy Bass - Â Spagna
Jeremy Bass - Amor E Gratioso
Jeremy Bass - FantasĂa
Jeremy Bass - Fantasia
Jeremy Bass - Passomezo E Il Suo Saltarello
Jeremy Bass - Fantasy
Jeremy Bass - La Rossignol
Jeremy Bass - Galliard After Laveche
Jeremy Bass - Ăśber Stock Und Stein
Jeremy Bass - Was Die GroĂźmutter Erzahlt
Jeremy Bass - Bange Frage
Jeremy Bass - A La Gigue
Jeremy Bass - Divertimento
Jeremy Bass - Un Dia De Noviembre
Howard Bass - Diciembre (1st Recording)
Jeremy Bass - MĂşsica Incidental Campesina: Preludio
Jeremy Bass - MĂşsica Incidental Campesina: Interludio
Jeremy Bass - MĂşsica Incidental Campesina: Danza
Jeremy Bass - MĂşsica Incidental Campesina: Final
Jeremy Bass - Fool on the Hill
Jeremy Bass - Penny Lane
Jeremy Bass
II. Romance of the Lute (Lutz Kirchhof, baroque lute). Centaur CRC 3164.

Lutz Kirchhof is a celebrated German lutenist and scholar who’s spent decades reviving the magic of historical lute music. Specializing in Renaissance and Baroque repertoire, he’s known for breathing life into works by composers like Bach, Weiss, and anonymous alchemist-musicians of old Europe. His recordings, like Bach: Complete Works For Lute and the Weiss: Lute Works series, blend technical precision with warm, storytelling flair, often exploring mystical themes tied to the instrument’s history (think witches, alchemy, and ancient symbolism). A passionate advocate for period authenticity, Kirchhof even performs on meticulously reconstructed historical lutes, making his concerts and albums feel like time-travel experiences. Whether he’s decoding “the language of the gods” or dusting off forgotten gems, his work keeps the lute’s delicate, intricate voice alive for modern ears.
During the Renaissance with its great variety of musical instruments, the Lute had already played an outstanding role. Although the instrument demanded extraordinary technique and intuition, it was known everywhere and enjoyed a great popularity.
What fascinated generations over many centuries was the subtlety of its music. Both hands of the player produce its tones and are in immediate contact to the strings. The finest tone colors and nuances, various forms of vibrato, a smooth alteration of attacks and of dynamics, are only a few of the creative and aural possibilities on this instrument. A practiced performer on this instrument had infinite expressive possibilities at his command. The refined and most secretive atmosphere that emerged from the Lute, made it possible to transform the listener into extraordinary worlds of feeling and to lure him out again, only to seduce him into still another emotional universe.
With the beginning of the Age of Sensitivity, the lute could excellently bring these qualities to the fore. The three composers on this recording have different styles and use the various possibilities of the lute in individual ways.
All three Lutenists were active at the time of Johann Sebastian Bach. Bach heard their music and experienced them in concert and, with certainty, influenced their styles of composing. Sylvius Leopold Weiss and Johann Kropfganss were guests in the Bach home where they also engaged in musical evenings with him. Rudolf Straube was a student of Johann Sebastian Bach.
Sylvius Leopold Weiss and Johann Sebastian Bach developed a close friendship and were reported to have frequently delivered musical contests during such visits in which, amazingly, neither of them could demonstrate his superiority over the other.
Johann Kropfganns (1708—??):
- Lute Sonata No. 1 In F Major: Lute Sonata No. 1 In F Major: III. Courante
- Lute Sonata In F Major: I. Fantasia Presto: Largo
- Lute Sonata In F Major: II. Tempo Giusto
- Lute Sonata In F Major: III. Andante Ma Non Molto
- Lute Sonata In F Major: IV. Vivace
- Lute Sonata In F Major: V. Minuetto I
- Lute Sonata In F Major: V. Minuetto II
- Lute Sonata In F Major: VI. Polaca
Sylvius Leopold Weiss (1686-1750):
- Lute Sonata No. 43 In A Minor: I. Allemande: Andante
- Lute Sonata No. 43 In A Minor: II. Courante
- Lute Sonata No. 43 In A Minor: III. Bourree
- Lute Sonata No. 43 In A Minor: IV. Sarabande: Andante
- Lute Sonata No. 43 In A Minor: V. Menuet I
- Lute Sonata No. 43 In A Minor: V. Menuet II
- Lute Sonata No. 43 In A Minor: VI. Presto
Johann Friedrich Daube (1730-1797):
- Lute Sonata No. 2 In G Major: I. Un Poco Allegro
- Lute Sonata No. 2 In G Major: II. Siciliano
- Lute Sonata No. 2 In G Major: III. Minuetto
- Lute Sonata No. 2 In G Major: IV. Poloneso
III. Concertos for Baroque Lute (Il Pomo d’Oro/Miguel Rincón). Aparte Music AP376.

After being the king of court instruments in the seventeenth century, a symbol of refined entertainment, the lute was gradually abandoned in the following century. A small group of virtuosos and composers nevertheless refused to accept this predicted decline: these musicians moved the epicentre of its influence to the courts of Vienna, Bayreuth and Dresden, adapting the codes and forms of the galant style to the lute, which for the first time integrated the orchestra in its own right.
Miguel RincĂłn and Il Pomo d'Oro bring together concertos by Kohaut, Fasch and Kleinknecht (world premiere), and a trio by Hagen, also recorded here for the first time. These splendid, inventive and virtuoso works reveal the richness of timbre and expression of an instrument that, at the crossroads of the Baroque, the Sturm und Drang and the galant style, was in its last throes.
After its golden age in the 17th century, the lute found new life in the 18th, thanks to virtuosos who integrated it into the orchestra and adapted the galant style to the instrument. A journey at the crossroads of the Baroque and Sturm und Drang, where the lute shines one last time.
Karl Kohaut (1726–1784): Concerto for Lute in F Major:
- Kohaut: Concerto for Lute in F Major: I. Allegro 05:27
- Kohaut: Concerto for Lute in F Major: II. Adagio 04:46
- Kohaut: Concerto for Lute in F Major: III. Tempo di minuetto 03:16
Bernhard Joachim Hagen (1720–1787): Trio in E-Flat Major:
- Hagen: Trio in E-Flat Major: I. Allegro 05:42
- Hagen: Trio in E-Flat Major: II. Andantino 04:09
- Hagen: Trio in E-Flat Major: III. Allegretto ma grazioso 02:29
Jakob Friedrich Kleinknecht (1722–1794): Concerto for Lute in C Major:
- Kleinknecht: Concerto for Lute in C Major: I. Allegro con brio 07:06
- Kleinknecht: Concerto for Lute in C Major: II. Andante di molto 05:27
- Kleinknecht: Concerto for Lute in C Major: III. Tantino allegro e grazioso 04:25
Johann Friedrich Fasch (1688 - 1758): Concerto for Lute in D Minor:
- Fasch: Concerto for Lute in D Minor: I. Allegro 05:01
- Fasch: Concerto for Lute in D Minor: II. Andante 06:32
- Fasch: Concerto for Lute in D Minor: III. Un poco allegro 03:42
Total Runtime: 58:02
