Handel didn't write much music for the English non-operatic 
                  theatre. There are a few songs, but Alceste is his only 
                  example of full-scale incidental music for a play. Handel does 
                  not seem to have been the instigator of the project and one 
                  of his 18th century biographers says that he undertook 
                  it to discharge a debt to John Rich, the owner and manager of 
                  the Covent Garden Theatre. 
                    
                  However it came about, the project does seem to have been Rich's 
                  idea. There we have it: a play by Tobias Smollett, music by 
                  Handel, a lavish production featuring actors and singers, chorus, 
                  dancers and big orchestra with opulent scenery. That it didn't 
                  happen might have been due to cost or because of Smollett's 
                  disputatious nature. We are not sure. 
                    
                  So substantial is Handel's score (some 60 minutes of music) 
                  that the project does rather resemble one of the semi-operas 
                  that Purcell worked on. Like semi-opera only the minor characters 
                  sing. So what we have is essentially a musical side-view of 
                  the Alceste story. 
                    
                  With the failure of the production we have lost Smollett’s 
                  play so have to make assumptions about the plot. Not that this 
                  really matters when listening to Handel’s music. The lyrics 
                  that Handel set were not by Smollett, but almost certainly by 
                  Thomas Morrell. The music from Alceste wasn’t discarded; 
                  Handel re-used it. Substantial amounts went into The Choice 
                  of Hercules (including an earlier version of Gentle Morpheus, 
                  a song Handel dropped from Alceste), Alexander’s 
                  Feast, Belshazzar’s Feast and Alexander 
                  Balus.  
                  On this new disc Christian Curnyn and the Early Opera Company 
                  give the complete music along with the sinfonia to Admeto 
                  - Handel's Italian opera on the Alceste story. We are also treated 
                  to the passacaille from Radamisto. 
                    
                  The set opens with the Ouverture and Grand Entrée 
                  which Curnyn and his orchestra render with lively precision. 
                  The first few numbers, solos and choruses are pleasant enough. 
                  Tenor Benjamin Hulett's solo Ye swift minutes fly is 
                  the first striking number, with fioriture finely rendered by 
                  Hulett. The soprano solo, Gentle Morpheus is a substantial 
                  and large-scale number. It is beautifully and caressingly sung 
                  by Lucy Crowe. In the play this lovely music is sung by the 
                  muse Calliope. 
                    
                  After a deft rendering of the sinfonia from Admeto, the 
                  scene changes to the Styx and the solo for Charon. It’s 
                  the only bass solo in the piece. Ye fleeting shades is 
                  an infectiously perky little piece, nicely sung here by Andrew 
                  Foster-Williams. This Charon is clearly happy in his work. 
                    
                  Lucy Crowe returns for one more solo, Come fancy, a nicely 
                  perky piece for Calliope. It’s perhaps not quite as ravishing 
                  as the first solo, but still charming. 
                    
                  Hulett has three major solos in total which he performs with 
                  lyrical charm. Musically, none are quite as memorable as the 
                  soprano and bass arias, but he impresses with his easy mellifluous 
                  voice, lovely sense of line and nice crisp ornamentation. 
                    
                  The orchestra and chorus of the Early Opera Company are on good 
                  form and Curnyn keeps the piece flowing. This ensures that there 
                  are no longueurs. The chorus impress with their brilliant yet 
                  keenly defined delivery and these qualities are also to be found 
                  in the orchestra. 
                    
                  The CD booklet contains a highly informative note by David Vickers, 
                  artist biographies and full texts. 
                    
                  Though Curnyn has recorded the music complete, it is a pity 
                  that we couldn’t have heard Handel’s first, and 
                  rather different, version of Gentle Morpheus along with 
                  Thetis bids me hither fly which was dropped from the 
                  score entirely. There would have been enough space on the disc. 
                  
                    
                  The music to Alceste was recorded by Christopher Hogwood 
                  and the Academy of Ancient Music with Emma Kirkby, Paul Elliott 
                  and David Thomas. Anyone who has this set may not feel the need 
                  to replace it but if you haven't yet made the acquaintance of 
                  Handel's personable score, then this is the time to do so and 
                  this is the recording to go for.   
                  
                  Robert Hugill
                  
                  See also review by Ralph 
                  Moore