This disc was originally 
                recorded in 1999, issued in 2001 and 
                re-issued in 2003. This latter reissue 
                is in eco-friendly cardboard packaging, 
                which is rather neatly designed but 
                lacking in liner notes – a frustrating 
                experience for those who might come 
                upon these underrated works for the 
                first time. [We understand 
                from Select that there is a booklet 
                with this disc which may have been missing 
                in the review copy]
              
 
              
Handel’s works from 
                his Italian period, particularly the 
                cantatas written for private performances 
                in the homes of his patrons, have a 
                brilliance that makes the enthusiasm 
                of his Roman patrons entirely understandable. 
                These were people who could afford the 
                best, so these works were written for 
                some of the finest singers of the day. 
                This makes performance today rather 
                tricky. For this disc, BIS had the felicitous 
                idea of calling upon the talents of 
                Emma Kirkby. 
              
 
              
Handel’s ‘Salve Regina’ 
                was written in 1707 or thereabouts, 
                for a religious Festival (possibly Trinity 
                Sunday) during Handel’s Roman period. 
                It may have been performed in Marchese 
                Ruspoli’s private chapel. Ruspoli was 
                one of Handel’s Roman patrons. Similarly, 
                ‘O qualis de caelo sonus’ dates from 
                the same year and may also have been 
                performed in similar circumstances. 
              
 
              
These are real display 
                pieces and Kirkby sings the florid lines 
                with enviable ease. With little vibrato 
                behind which to hide these could-be-cruel 
                pieces, but Kirkby’s technique is rock 
                solid and she has a fine command of 
                Handel’s bravura. If I had any complaint 
                it is that I would have liked a little 
                more warmth in the voice, but faced 
                with such virtuosity this seems rather 
                an unworthy thought. 
              
 
              
The Trio sonata in 
                G minor possibly dates from around 1719. 
                The Trio Sonatas are unaccountably neglected 
                and London Baroque give a fine performance 
                which makes the work’s neglect all the 
                more puzzling. 
              
 
              
‘Caelestis dum spirat 
                aura’ dates again from 1707 and was 
                written for the Feast of St. Anthony 
                of Padua and probably received its first 
                performance in Ruspoli’s private chapel. 
                A serene work in which the singer contemplates 
                St. Anthony’s apotheosis, it shows Kirkby 
                at her effortlessly simple best. The 
                work concludes with a joyful Alleluia. 
              
 
              
The final work on the 
                disc is the most substantial ‘Laudate 
                Pueri’. This F major setting of Psalm 
                112 is one of the oldest Handel manuscripts 
                that we possess, possibly dating from 
                1706 when he was still in Germany. It 
                is a brilliant piece, difficult to bring 
                off. But Kirkby and London Baroque give 
                a superb performance that makes one 
                wish that all Handel music making could 
                be of this order. 
              
 
              
Robert Hugill