HANDEL Apollo e Dafne. Il pasto fido Overture
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: George Frideric Handel
Genre:
Vocal
Label: Linn
Magazine Review Date: 10/2016
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 69
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: CKD543

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Apollo e Dafne, '(La) terra è liberata' |
George Frideric Handel, Composer
Callum Thorpe, Bass Ensemble Marsyas George Frideric Handel, Composer Mhairi Lawson, Soprano Peter Whelan, Harpsichord |
(Il) Pastor fido, Movement: Overture |
George Frideric Handel, Composer
Ensemble Marsyas George Frideric Handel, Composer Peter Whelan, Harpsichord |
(2) Arias |
George Frideric Handel, Composer
Ensemble Marsyas George Frideric Handel, Composer Peter Whelan, Harpsichord |
Author: Alexandra Coghlan
Running to nearly 25 minutes, the Overture to Il pastor fido (substituted here for the cantata’s own, now lost) is an unusually extended affair – a standalone suite in all but name. The variety of its six movements offers a lyrical aria for oboe, some fine bassoon sallies in the Allegro (gleefully raw and sonorous here) and a flash of expressive solo harpsichord in the second Largo, all stylishly rendered by the ensemble. Even better are the two arias for wind ensemble (HWV410 and 411) that follow – the first an ingenious and highly coloured reimagining of material better known as ‘Sono i colpi della sorte’ from Rodelinda, in which pairs of horns and oboes lead a stately march, and the second pitting the two pairs of instruments against one another in amiable and occasionally raucous rivalry.
The cantata Apollo e Dafne concentrates Handel’s melodic invention into a swift retelling of the Greek legend of a lustful god’s pursuit of an innocent nymph. One of Handel’s most-recorded works, notable previous pairings in this vocal two-hander have included Michael Chance and Nancy Argenta, Thomas Hampson and Roberta Alexander and – most recently – the Gramophone Award-winning combination of Roberta Invernizzi and Thomas Bauer. Here Callum Thorpe – that rarest and most exciting of things, a genuine young bass rather than a baritone with low notes – is a little outsung by Mhairi Lawson’s Dafne, a nymph whose agile coloratura and full-voiced recitative does little to suggest a helpless victim. Her exquisite entrance aria, ‘Felicissima quest’alma’, barely touches the ground, so lightly spun are its phrases. If Thorpe and Lawson can’t quite match Bauer and Invernizzi for vocal poise and dramatic immediacy, this is still a recording worth buying for the colour and quality of the orchestral playing.
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