John Butt, Dunedin Consort & Players - Handel: Acis & Galatea (2008) [Hi-Res]

  • 09 Mar, 11:42
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Artist:
Title: Handel: Acis & Galatea (Original Cannons Performing Version 1718)
Year Of Release: 2008
Label: Linn Records
Genre: Classical
Quality: FLAC (tracks, booklet) [88.2/24] / FLAC (image + .cue, log, scans)
Total Time: 1:35:13
Total Size: 1.72 GB / 492 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01 - Sinfonia
02 - Chorus Oh the pleasure of the plains
03 - Accompagnato Ye verdant plains and woody mountains
04 - Air Hush ye pretty warbling quire
05 - Air Where shall I seek the charming fair
06 - Recitative Stay shepherd stay
07 - Air Shepherd what art thou pursuing
08 - Recitative Lo here my love
09 - Air Love in her eyes sits playing
10 - Recitative Oh didst thou know the pains of absent love
11 - Air As when the dove laments her love
12 - Duet Happy we
13 - Chorus Wretched lovers
14 - Accompagnato I rage I melt I burn
15 - Air O ruddier than the cherry
16 - Recitative Whither fairest art thou running
17 - Air Cease to beauty to be suing
18 - Air Would you gain the tender creature
19 - Recitative His hideous love provokes my rage
20 - Air Love sounds th alarm
21 - Air Consider fond shepherd
22 - Recitative Cease oh cease thou gentle youth
23 - Trio The flocks shall leave the mountains
24 - Accompagnato Help Galatea Help ye parent gods
25 - Chorus Mourn all ye muses
26 - Solo Chorus Must I my Acis still bemoan
27 - Recitative Tis done Thus I exert my pow r divine
28 - Air Heart the seat of soft delight
29 - Chorus Galatea dry thy tears

The Dunedin Consort, led by John Butt, has moved into the niche of recording original or obscure versions of Baroque choral masterworks using forces as close as possible to those of the original performances. Its 2006 performance of the Dublin version of Messiah is one of the liveliest and refreshingly intimate recordings of the work, and won a Gramophone Award for Best Baroque Vocal Album of the year. Here the group turns its attention to a much earlier Handel work, the 1718 pastoral oratorio Acis & Galatea. Through ingenious musical detective work, Butt has reconstructed the most likely constitution of the ensemble that originally performed the piece while the composer was employed at Cannons House in Middlesex. Acis & Galatea is a work stronger on charm than substance, but its charms are considerable, from its lively and lyrical solos and ensembles to its inventive and clever orchestration. While Handel is not known for comedy, and this piece is in fact a tragedy (a rejected suitor kills his rival, but the heroine transforms her slain lover into a fountain, so things don't turn out too badly), the librettists and composer treat the subject lightly and with genuine wit. The villain is portrayed as a buffoon, and Butt and his singers play up the work's humor. Baritone Matthew Brook is vocally virtuosic and comically convincing as Polyphemus; his arias "O ruddier than the cherry" and "Cease to beauty to be suing" are among the highlights of the recording. As Galatea, soprano Susan Hamilton sings with purity and unmannered grace. Tenor Nicholas Mulroy as Acis has a somewhat covered sound that keeps him from being truly heroic. Thomas Hobbs, in the secondary role of role of Damon, has a light but bright and clarion tenor. The orchestra plays with exquisite finesse and expressiveness. Butt and his exemplary forces make a strong case for this odd little piece and give it a depth and coherence that make their performance stand out among the recorded versions. -- Stephen Eddins

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