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             Georg Frideric HANDEL 
              (1685-1759) 
              Eight Great Suites for Solo Harpsichord HWV426–433 (1720): 
              Suite No. 1 in A, HWV 426 [11:26] 
              Suite No. 2 in F, HWV 427 [8:54]  
              Suite No. 3 in d minor, HWV428 [23:16]*  
              Suite No. 4 in e minor, HWV 429 [12:46]  
              Suite No. 5 in E, HWV 430 [13:44]  
              Suite No. 6 in f# minor, HWV 431[9:02] 
              Suite No. 7 in g minor, HWV 432 [19:49] 
              Suite No. 8 in f minor, HWV 433 [12:05]  
                
              Laurence Cummings (harpsichord)  
              rec. Handel House, London, 4-6 and 9 November 2008. DDD. 
              Recorded in collaboration with BBC Radio 3 and Handel House Museum 
              in celebration of Handel’s 250th Anniversary.  
              * Not 3:16 as stated on rear insert.  
                
              SOMM CÉLESTE SOMMCD 095-2 [57:42 + 55:00]   
             
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          Georg Frideric HANDEL 
            (1685-1759)  
            Suites for harpsichord: Volume 1  
            Suite in d minor, HWV428 [24:52]** 
            Suite in A, HWV454 [14:35]  
            Suite in e minor, HWV438 [8:07]  
            Suite in C, HWV443 [27:12] 
            Suite in g minor, HWV439 [17:15] 
            Suite in G, HWV441 [21:49]  
            Suite in e minor, HWV429 [16:30] 
            Suite in E, HWV430 [14:50]     
            Gilbert Rowland (harpsichord)  
            rec. Holy Trinity Church, Weston, Herts, England, 5-8 July 2010. DDD 
             
            ** Not 42:52 as stated on rear insert.     
            DIVINE ART DDA21219 [74:54 + 71:34]   
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                  Since I included a shorter version of this review in my May 
                  2011/1 Download Roundup, I’ve been practising some of these 
                  Suites myself, with so little success that my admiration for 
                  both recordings has increased considerably. If, as seems the 
                  case, Handel intended these works as practice material for students, 
                  he clearly expected a great deal more than my fingers are currently 
                  able to produce on returning to the keyboard after a very long 
                  interval.  
                   
                  Though these two sets don’t cover exactly the same material, 
                  since Rowland’s programme includes only three of the ‘Great’ 
                  Suites from ‘Set 1’ HWV428, 429 and 430 – presumably, the others 
                  will appear in subsequent volumes – there is enough common ground 
                  for me to consider them together. They do, however, share some 
                  sloppy booklet and insert proof-reading which makes HWV428 three 
                  minutes long from Cummings and an equally unlikely 43 minutes 
                  from Rowland. I’ve given the correct, much closer, figures above. 
                   
                   
                  I’ve listened to some other harpsichord recordings of these 
                  suites but left out consideration of alternative recordings 
                  on the modern piano, since my clear preference is for Handel 
                  on the harpsichord, despite the merits of the playing of the 
                  likes of Gavrilov and Richter on EMI Gemini.  
                   
                  I can’t pretend that the new CDs are the most exciting product 
                  of the Handel anniversary year and its aftermath, but each represents 
                  a welcome addition to the catalogue. Apart from the chief competitor, 
                  Paul Nicholson on a 2-for-1 Hyperion Dyad reissue of HWV426-433 
                  plus eight fugues (CDD22045 – CD or download from Hyperion 
                  in mp3 and lossless), and the few other recordings listed below, 
                  these Suites are not over-represented in the catalogue. 
                  Unfortunately for his new rivals, however, Nicholson’s playing 
                  is mostly of very high quality and the Hyperion price highly 
                  attractive, so I’ve taken this as my benchmark. It offers stiff 
                  competition for the new releases, though the Divine Art set 
                  is also offered at a keen price.  
                   
                  John France regarded the Hyperion set as his benchmark, though 
                  he also thought that Ottavio Dantone’s performances on Arts 
                  47698-2 and 47699-2, which also contain several extra pieces, 
                  compared favourably – see review. 
                  Mark Sealey thought that Sophie Yates’ recording on Chandos 
                  had much to recommend it (Chandos CHAN0644, 0669 and 0688), 
                  though preferring the Arkiv CDR reissue of Trevor Pinnock’s 
                  recording of some of the Suites (410 656-2 – see review). 
                  That Arkiv CD offers rather short value, though the price, currently 
                  $14.99, partially redresses the balance of value, especially 
                  if you download from passionato.com – here 
                  – in mp3 (£7.99) or flac (£9.99).  
                   
                  In the main Laurence Cummings is slower than the opposition, 
                  but some of his tempi are decidedly fast: the presto 
                  finale of Suite No.3, HWV428, more familiar from the organ concertos 
                  – Handel’s typical re-use of his own material – is a case in 
                  point. He dashes this off in 4:35, at which speed it sounds 
                  ever so slightly a scramble, as against Nicholson’s more sedate 
                  5:04 and Rowland’s slightly too deliberate 5:22. Martin Souter 
                  (The Gift of Music CCLCD009, Suites 1-5) is even faster at 4:28, 
                  yet contrives to sound deliberate rather than rushed. Isolde 
                  Ahlgrimm (Corona Classic Collection 001952CCC, Suites 1-4 and 
                  Chaconne in G) and Alan Cuckston (Naxos 8.550415, Suites 1-5; 
                  8.550416, Suites 6-8 and other works) cut the repeat and shorten 
                  the movement to 3:00 and 2:38 respectively, thereby almost editing 
                  it out of existence, which is a shame because Ahlgrimm, one 
                  of the pioneers of modern harpsichord playing, gives a very 
                  interesting personal interpretation.  
                   
                  We’ve already seen that Rowland is a little more deliberate 
                  than Cummings in the finale of HWV428 and that’s true in most 
                  of the movements of that work. On the few occasions where Rowland 
                  is slightly faster, the difference is hardly perceptible in 
                  practice, but where he is slower, it’s often by quite a margin: 
                
 
                   
                        | 
                      Cummings   | 
                      Rowland   | 
                      Nicholson   | 
                   
                   
                    |  Prelude  | 
                      0:47   | 
                      1:12   | 
                      1:04   | 
                   
                   
                    |  Allegro  | 
                      3:08   | 
                      2:41   | 
                      3:06   | 
                   
                   
                    |  Allemande  | 
                      3:39   | 
                      4:34   | 
                      4:46   | 
                   
                   
                    |  Courante  | 
                      2:29   | 
                      2:11   | 
                      2:03   | 
                   
                   
                    |  Air and Doubles  | 
                      8:38   | 
                      8:52   | 
                      9:28   | 
                   
                   
                    |  Presto  | 
                      4:35   | 
                      5:22   | 
                      5:04   | 
                   
                 
                 
                   
                  I noted Rowland’s slightly deliberate manner even before I compared 
                  the timings, especially in the Allemande. Views of the 
                  right tempo for this movement do seem to vary considerably, 
                  however, and Rowland is not the slowest here, with Nicholson 
                  taking 4:46 and Yates only slightly faster at 4:25. There’s 
                  nothing ‘wrong’ with any of the three versions of this movement. 
                  Nevertheless, I prefer Cummings’ view of this movement to those 
                  of Rowland and Nicholson.  
                   
                  As a matter of pure interest, though I said that I wouldn’t 
                  compare piano versions, Andrei Gavrilov prunes and demolishes 
                  the Allemande from this Suite in 2:33 (EMI Gemini 5865402). 
                   
                   
                  Rowland’s version of HWV429 takes 16:30 overall against Cummings’ 
                  13:46 and Nicholson’s 16:00: this time it’s the fourth movement 
                  Sarabande that accounts for most of the difference, with 
                  honours about even in the other sections. A sarabande is a slow 
                  and stately dance, so there’s a good case to be made for Rowland’s 
                  decision to take 4:50 – Nicholson is slower still at 5:06 – 
                  almost half as long again as Cummings (3:21), yet ultimately 
                  I come down on Cummings’ side. Perhaps Yates, who falls between 
                  the two tempi, has it right here.  
                   
                  For a final example, I compared the versions of the famous ‘Harmonious 
                  Blacksmith’, the final Air and Variations from HWV430. Here, 
                  for once, Rowland is slightly faster than Cummings – 4:25 against 
                  4:47 – and both are in line with the view which most performers 
                  take for the tempo here: Yates (4:40), Cuckston (4:39) and Nicholson 
                  (4:35) are in near-complete agreement in splitting the difference 
                  between the two new recordings almost exactly.  
                   
                  More to the point, I found here none of the over-deliberation 
                  in Rowland’s performance that I noted elsewhere – it’s a free-wheeling 
                  account. On the other hand, if you want this movement played 
                  in a lighter, more pastoral style on a softer-voiced instrument, 
                  evoking, as it were, the village blacksmith whose name has come 
                  to be attached to this piece, especially when it’s played on 
                  its own, the lighter touch and more distant recording of Cummings 
                  on Somm will be your preferred choice. I thought both accounts 
                  preferable to the slower tempo adopted by Blandine Verlet in 
                  a recording of the Eight ‘Great’ Suites for Auvidis Astrée (E8655) 
                  – on paper, she seems much faster by dint of omitting some repeats. 
                   
                   
                  It’s swings and roundabouts, then, in terms of performance from 
                  Laurence Cummings, Gilbert Rowland and Paul Nicholson. That 
                  all three are Handelians through and through is never in doubt: 
                  Laurence Cummings in particular is the director of the London 
                  Handel Festival and has participated in a number of excellent 
                  recordings of the composer for Somm, as conductor (Joshua, 
                  SOMMCD240-2; Esther, SOMMCD238-9) and as a member of 
                  the London Handel Players (Flute Concerto, etc., SOMMCD055; 
                  Violin Sonatas, SOMMCD068; Trio Sonatas, Op.5, SOMMCD044). You’ll 
                  find our ‘Seen and Heard’ reviewers using terms such as ‘exemplary’ 
                  about his concert performances.  
                   
                  Johan van Veen was disparaging about Rowland’s performances 
                  on Volume 10 of the Naxos series of the keyboard works of Soler 
                  for their ‘relentless hammering ... with very little differentiation 
                  and variation’ – see review. 
                  He may well have the same reaction to this Handel recording, 
                  since Cummings’ playing is softer-voiced throughout. Handel’s 
                  keyboard works are of a higher order than Soler’s and I think 
                  JV was partly put off by his dislike of the music. In any event, 
                  I’m more inclined to agree with Michael Cookson’s review of 
                  Volume 9: ‘a really fine performance from Gilbert Rowland who 
                  was an inspired choice’ – see review. 
                  Just bear in mind that what I perceive as a more forthright 
                  style is another well-informed listener’s relentless hammering. 
                   
                   
                  As for Nicholson’s Handelian credentials, Peter J Lawson recommended 
                  another Hyperion 2-for-1 set on which he plays the Organ 
                  Concertos, Op.4 and Op.7 (CDD22052). His conclusion that 
                  ‘Nicholson’s playing though admirably polished communicates 
                  more of a studied respect for Handel than the flamboyance one 
                  imagines distinguished Handel’s own playing’ would serve to 
                  describe his playing of the Suites, except that I’m more 
                  than happy with the slight understatement of his playing here. 
                   
                   
                  With three such distinguished recordings, unless and until you 
                  begin to make direct comparisons, I imagine that most could 
                  be happy with any one of these three sets. That was my initial 
                  feeling before doing the ‘building a library’ job and it remains 
                  the case.  
                   
                  With two CDs for the price of one, the Hyperion is the least 
                  expensive, especially as a download from hyperion-records.co.uk, 
                  where the lossless version comes at the same price as the mp3, 
                  £7.99, with the booklet as part of the deal. That’s even less 
                  expensive than the two Naxos CDs which contain the Cuckston 
                  recordings; both offer between them more than just the Eight 
                  ‘Great’ Suites.  
                   
                  The difference between the Somm and Divine Art recordings and 
                  instruments which I noted in the finale of HWV430 is true throughout, 
                  with Rowland more forward, louder-voiced and at a higher volume 
                  that Cummings, though never unduly so. The closeness of the 
                  Divine Art recording, however, is likely to become more tiring 
                  than the Somm after a while. Though I think you’re hardly likely 
                  to want to play both CDs in one go, you may well find the Cummings 
                  recording easier to live with in that respect.  
                   
                  The Somm notes are brief but generally to the point, though 
                  nowhere will you find a reference to that well-known nickname 
                  for the finale of HWV430. The Divine Art notes are a little 
                  fuller and Hyperion offer a booklet of their usual high quality 
                  – available as a pdf document from their website and worth reading 
                  whether you buy the set or not.  
                   
                  From Somm, two CDs, each playing for less than an hour, seem 
                  poor value by today’s standards, even though the set is on sale 
                  for less than full price, when Hyperion offer several extra 
                  works on Paul Nicholson’s recording for the price of one CD. 
                  Divine Art give you more music for your money; they also offer 
                  their two-CD sets for less than premium price, and spread their 
                  net more widely than just the works of Set 1. I’d love to leave 
                  it at that, say that all three recordings have their virtues, 
                  and sit on the fence. I know, however, that you want me to plump, 
                  so, for overall satisfaction with tempo and performance, the 
                  quality of the booklet, and availability at a very reasonable 
                  price, it has to be Paul Nicholson on Hyperion.  
                   
                  You may also wish to be aware of an inexpensive download-only 
                  reissue of an important historic recording of four of these 
                  suites and what I wrote about it in my July 2011/1 Download 
                  Roundup:  
                   
                  George Frideric HANDEL (1685-1759) Harpsichord 
                  Suites Nos. 1-4, HWV426-429 Thurston Dart (harpsichord) – rec. 
                  1959. ADD/mono 
                  BEULAH EXTRA 18-21BX69 [11:04 + 11:46 + 8:19 + 19:38] 
                  – from Beulah eavb.co.uk 
                  (mp3)  
                  Dart’s harpsichord, a Thomas Goff from 1952, is larger and louder 
                  than on either of [the Cummings or Rowlands] recordings, 16' 
                  stop and all, and Dart’s manner is more forthright, but I found 
                  it instructive, as always with Thurston Dart, to see how far 
                  current thinking has come since his time and how much he himself 
                  did to build the framework of those modern thoughts. The recording 
                  is a little up-front and dry but perfectly acceptable in this 
                  transfer – better than I recall from the ‘electronic stereo’ 
                  transfer from the 1970s, though I miss the attractive covers 
                  of those £0.99 Oiseau Lyre LPs.  
                   
                  I shall certainly be returning to Thurston Dart alongside the 
                  two very satisfying new sets of the Handel Keyboard Suites from 
                  Cummings and Rowland, but Nicholson on Hyperion’s 2-for-1 alternative 
                  will almost certainly claim my listening attention more than 
                  any other.    
                Brian Wilson  
                
                  
                  
               
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