Handel Alceste; Comus
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: George Frideric Handel
Label: Florilegium
Magazine Review Date: 11/1994
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 74
Mastering:
ADD
Catalogue Number: 443 183-2OM

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Alceste |
George Frideric Handel, Composer
Academy of Ancient Music Christopher Hogwood, Conductor David Thomas, Bass Emma Kirkby, Soprano George Frideric Handel, Composer Judith Nelson, Soprano Margaret Cable, Mezzo soprano Paul Elliott, Tenor |
Comus |
George Frideric Handel, Composer
Academy of Ancient Music Christopher Hogwood, Conductor David Thomas, Bass George Frideric Handel, Composer Margaret Cable, Mezzo soprano Patrizia Kwella, Soprano |
Author: Jonathan Freeman-Attwood
The events surrounding Handel's incidental music to Alceste are clouded in mystery. The play, ''a sort of Tragedy on the Story of Alceste'' as the author, Tobias Smollett called it, has never been recovered and moreover the performances due for early 1750 were unaccountably cancelled—despite large sums already expended to secure the best scenery, sets and actors. Handel's music, predictably, found its way into new projects for that year but the score of Alceste still gives us an insight into the role music played in the original conception, one not entirely dissimilar to the part Purcell's music played in English semi-operas a couple of generations earlier; none of the major protagonists sing but music is used to affirm the narrative or enhance the prevailing emotion. One such affecting moment, and one of Emma Kirkby's golden arias on record, is the first aria sung by the muse, Calliope. ''Gentle Morpheus'' is essentially an adopted Lullian sommeil in which this minor character appears to Admetus (Alceste's wife) in a notably cathartic dream, here transformed by the new Italian da capo mentality.
My initial reaction on returning to a recording which encapsulated so much of the pioneering spirit of the British 'period performance' movement is that the clarity of that new sound-world is still freshly communicated, as in the case with so many of Florilegium re-releases. Cynics might claim that a work such as this represents no more than a sort of musical Laura Ashley pattern where no real interpretative demands are made on the performers, hence a perfect canvas for all to shine in the early music milieu of 1979. I would say in response, that despite the distinctly undramatic nature of the music, the good judgement and gentleness of touch which went into these sessions resulted in a Handel record of distinction. So much for critics of baroque string playing—it is a delight throughout. In ''Come Fancy'' the articulation is engagingly light and contributes significantly to Hogwood's astute characterization. The singing, typical of so many releases of the time, is in some contexts a little undemonstrative and precious but in others revelatory. Handel's slight setting of the epilogue from Milton's masque is worth hearing but does not warrant repeated listening as do the many joys of Alceste.'
My initial reaction on returning to a recording which encapsulated so much of the pioneering spirit of the British 'period performance' movement is that the clarity of that new sound-world is still freshly communicated, as in the case with so many of Florilegium re-releases. Cynics might claim that a work such as this represents no more than a sort of musical Laura Ashley pattern where no real interpretative demands are made on the performers, hence a perfect canvas for all to shine in the early music milieu of 1979. I would say in response, that despite the distinctly undramatic nature of the music, the good judgement and gentleness of touch which went into these sessions resulted in a Handel record of distinction. So much for critics of baroque string playing—it is a delight throughout. In ''Come Fancy'' the articulation is engagingly light and contributes significantly to Hogwood's astute characterization. The singing, typical of so many releases of the time, is in some contexts a little undemonstrative and precious but in others revelatory. Handel's slight setting of the epilogue from Milton's masque is worth hearing but does not warrant repeated listening as do the many joys of Alceste.'
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