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			Beauty of the Baroque
 John DOWLAND (1563 – 1626)
 1. Come again: sweet love doth now invite [2:42]
 2. What if I never speed? [2:31]
 George Frideric HANDEL (1685 – 1759)
 3. Ombra mai fu (Serse) [2:54]
 4. Let the bright Seraphim (Samson)¹ [5:34]
 Henry PURCELL (1659 – 1695)
 5. Thy hand, Belinda ... When I am laid in earth (Dido’s lament (Dido and Aeneas)) [5:07]
 George Frideric HANDEL
 6. Heart, the seat of soft delight (Acis and Galatea) [4:10]
 Claudio MONTEVERDI (1567 – 1643)
 7. Pur ti miro (L’incoronazione di Poppea)* [4:35]
 8. Quel sguardo sdegnosetto (Scherzi musicale) [3:01]
 George Frideric HANDEL
 9. Io t’abbraccio (Rodelinda)* [6:53]
 10. Guardian angels, oh, protect me (The Triumph of Time and Truth) [5:59]
 Giovanni Battista PERGOLESI (1710 – 1736)
 11. Stabat Mater (Stabat Mater)* [3:56]
 Johann Sebastian BACH (1685 – 1750)
 12. Sich üben im Leben (Cantata “Weichet nur, betrübte Schatten”, BWV 202)² [4:38]
 13. Schafe können sicher weiden (Cantata “Was mir behagt, ist nur die muntre Jagd!” BWV 208) [4:46]
 
             
            Danielle de Niese (soprano), Andreas Scholl (counter-tenor)*
 Mark Bennett (trumpet)¹, Katharina Sprerckelsen (oboe)² 
 The English Concert/Harry Bicket
 
			rec. St Jude-on-the-Hill, Hampstead Garden Suburb, London, 12-16 August 2010; Les Dominicains de Haute-Alsace, France, 24 January 2011 (7)
 Sung texts and English, German and French translations enclosed
 
             
            DECCA 478 2260    [56:50]  
			 
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                  I admired Danielle de Niese’s Handel disc a lot but had reservations 
                  concerning her choice of arias some of which were too taxing. 
                  I had more serious misgivings when her Mozart arias CD came 
                  out though on the whole it was still recommendable. Now she 
                  has returned to the Baroque with this collection of lollipops 
                  and songs and arias that have, to a large extent, been fairly 
                  often recorded.  
                   
                  I still admire her beautiful voice and charming delivery. Among 
                  the highlights are a lively and dramatic Let the bright Seraphim 
                  from Samson with springy orchestral playing and excellent 
                  trumpet work from Mark Bennett. Then there’s the aria from Acis 
                  and Galatea where she radiates charm, and the two concluding 
                  Bach arias, of which Sich üben im Lieben is lovely. Guardian 
                  angels is no doubt gloriously sung but I hankered after 
                  softer nuances, and Ombra mai fu from Serse, devoid 
                  of its recitative is somewhat low for de Niese. Dido’s lament, 
                  this time with recitative, is involved and deeply felt – maybe 
                  a deeper voice would have brought greater dignity.  
                   
                  The Dowland songs are sung with a good feel for the lyrics, 
                  but we have become used to hearing them with a straighter voice; 
                  her vibrato is a mite too wide in this case. Quel sguardo 
                  sdegnosetto by Monteverdi is made to swing. It is well sung, 
                  some unsteadiness apart and de Niese’s singing has ‘face’.  
                   
                  As is often the case with recitals nowadays there is a guest 
                  artist. Andreas Scholl has been invited de Niese for three duets 
                  and these have some claims to be among the best, too. Pur 
                  ti miro, the concluding duet from Monteverdi’s L’incoronazione 
                  di Poppea, is no longer thought to have been composed by 
                  Monteverdi – some scholars suggest Cavalli – but whoever 
                  wrote it, it is a fine piece and is ravishingly sung here. The 
                  Rodelinda duet is certainly one of Handel’s finest creations 
                  and Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater must also be counted among 
                  the young maestro’s best things. It was written in 1736, the 
                  year of his death. One of several brilliant talents who had 
                  to leave this mundane world too early. What would have become 
                  of him in just ten years’ time?  
                   
                  Harry Bicket has been at the head of the English Concert since 
                  September 2007 but he worked with the orchestra as harpsichordist 
                  as early as 1984, so no wonder there is excellent rapport between 
                  them. The playing here couldn’t be more accomplished.  
                   
                  A somewhat mixed bag, then, but there is such freshness and 
                  charm in whatever Danielle de Niese does that in the end one 
                  capitulates.  
                   
                  Göran Forsling  
                                                                 
             
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