Here
is the presentation of one of the most important volumes of music of
all times for solo instrument. In what has come to be known as the
“London Manuscript”, located in the British Library, we find 317 pages
of tablature for Baroque Lute containing 237 pieces by Silvius Leopold
Weiss (1687-1750). These works are grouped into 26 full solo sonatas
with additional material interspersed in the form of 3 preludes, 2
fugues, 1 prelude and fugue, 2 fantasias, 2 tombeaux, a caprice, an
overture, a plainte, assorted minuets, gavottes, etc., in addition to
five grand duos including the three concertos for lute and transverse
flute of four movements each (the flute part is missing) and the two
mystery sonatas with neither soprano voice nor title information
(believed with a high degree of certainty to be duets). The nomenclature
“London Manuscript” is used to distinguish this collection from various
other Weiss folios that are housed in Dresden, Salzburg, Vienna,
Moscow, Paris, etc. It should be noted that the London Manuscript,
despite its extraordinary significance, is representative of less than
one half of the total output of this remarkably prolific composer.
The works in the London Manuscript, although having full pagination
and partial (although important) piece numbering, do not seem however at
first glance to conform to any obvious formal ordering, either
chronological, keywise or stylistic, but one can observe with a certain
degree of fascination that even these aspects have been taken in
consideration. The document should be seen as a body of works that grew
over the years, becoming a precious collector’s item for the definitive
owner, Count Johann Christian Anthony (Anthoni) von Adlersfeld of
Prague.
Composed between 1706 and 1730, this massive musical oeuvre was never
published during his lifetime. In fact Weiss pre-dated Paganini with
his penchant for maintaining exclusive proprietorship, for him and very
few friends, of his virtuoso works. Silvius Leopold must have had a high
degree of confidence in allowing such an exception, knowing likewise
that Adlersfeld was not a lutenist but rather a collector wishing to
keep his exclusive treasure forever. From a collector to another, the
volume was undoubtedly passed from hand to hand, before being acquired
for two pounds Sterling by the British Museum in 1877. In this
manuscript, D. A. Smith has accurately identified six different sorts of
handwriting, including that of the master (Weiss) himself. From this we
can ascertain that the work was extensively revised, most notably in
those pieces that were edited by the five other copyists. We now know
that the pagination and the piece numbering are contemporaneous with the
edition of the works. All this supports a central thesis that the
manuscript was meticulously revised by an author who viewed the
individual pieces as part of a unified whole, but was not intended to
publication. This would explain the contradiction between the musical
perfection and the disregard for titles, minute chronology (specific
dates are provided for only a few pieces and sonatas) and precise
separations between the works. This strong dichotomy should help us, in
the end, and contrarily to our first beliefs, to seriously consider the
London Manuscript as generally being musically the most reliable
document in a comparative study of sources.