Unitarian Meeting Hall
Thursday 12th March 2026
It was an honour and real treat for BCGS to host Johan at one of our Thursday, monthly meet-ups. His recital focussed upon music written for guitar in Victorian London during the middle of the 19th century – arguably the high point of classical guitar playing in the UK. Contrasting with the deep resonance and sustain of a modern (post-Torres) guitar, Johan’s use of an original 1850’s parlor guitar propelled us back in time to the Victorian Salon.
That Johan is a committed teacher of the guitar was evidenced in tonight’s concert by his mixture of playing, presenting and reflection. Through his presentation he conjured up a colourful image of the players, composers, as well as the guitar scene, of ‘Pratten’s London’. Interestingly, although all the composers cited in tonight’s concert lived for a time in England (indeed, Nuske, Pratten, and Regondi all died in London), they were all born outside of the UK.
The same is also true for Swedish born Johan.
Johan opened his recital with a brilliant rendition of the Russian-born Nuske’s Fantasia in C Major, Variations on ‘God Save the King’. From this, it was immediately apparent why Johan uses a guitar made well over 100 years ago: this little, relatively quiet, guitar is capable of producing an astonishing variety of colour and dynamism, an effect that exudes a unique character. This was amply illustrated in Nuske’s fantasia. Johan’s performance provided not only a masterclass of playing on a Victorian guitar, but also highlighted Nuske’s exceptional ability as a composer of music for the guitar.
Johan treated us next to a small selection from the vast compositional output of Catharina Pratten. Moving with her family to England when she was a small child, Catharina was the daughter of the German guitarist and music teacher Ferdinand Pelzer, with herself becoming a leading figure in the guitar world. As a player, not only did she start touring at the incredibly young age of 8 years old, composed over 250 pieces for guitar and voice, and taught widely – including to the daughters of Queen Victoria – she also wrote highly respected teaching methods. Providing us with printed excerpts from Pratten’s method, Johan commented on their remarkable level of detail. In the three pieces he played, Johan very ably demonstrated all of the techniques taught by Pratten: the tonal effects of moving the right hand position in the melancholic A Lost Love; left hand slides, the use of tremolo, harmonics and rasgueado in Forgotten; and the harmonizing of voice and guitar in Twilight. Taken together, these pieces, played by Johan with impressive skill and style, provided striking evidence of how and why the young virtuoso Catherina Pelzer developed into the towering Grande Dame of the Victorian classical guitar, Catherina Pratten.
The next piece Johan played was by the Spaniard Huerta. Huerta was a celebrated guitarist, nicknamed ‘the Paganini of the guitar’ and referred to by Berlioz as one of the three best musicians of his time. Lola Montès was a wonderful dance-like, driven piece, with a bouncy bass line, full of Spanish color, augmented by lavish use of tremolo, arpeggio, pizzicato, and rasgueado.
Johan ended his recital with the virtuosic classic of 19th Century guitar repertoire, Introduction et Caprice, by the Swiss-born Giulio Regondi. Two years Pratten’s senior, like her, Regondi was also a child prodigy. However, his youthful concertizing earned him the great honour of having a
piece of music (op. 46) dedicated to him by no less than Fernando Sor. As in the other offerings from Johan tonight, he performed this very challenging piece with seeming ease, along with huge verve and charm. To hear this wonderful piece performed with such skill and musicality on an original guitar – dating from the period during which it was composed – felt like a privilege and a dreamy time-travel back to a very high point in the history of the classical guitar.
Programme
Johann Abraham Nüske (1796-1865)
Fantasia in C Major: Variations on ‘God Save the King’
Catharina Pratten (1824-1895)
A Lost Love
Forgotten
Twilight
Francisco Trinidad Huerta (1800-1874)
Lola Montès; Boléro Favori et Original Op. 54
Giulio Regondi (1822-1872)
Introduction et Caprice Op. 23
