A good recording of this quite wonderful work has been long overdue and it
is heartening that Robert King and his splendid forces have given their best
to their sublime task. King's group of soloists are amongst the most committed
Handelians around and the recipe for success is indeed there. Of course it
is fair to say that various incomplete and corrupt editions have plagued
the work so it is doubly good to note that the version used here is as complete
as one could expect, on both fronts. The opening Overture is taken from one
of Handel's Concerti Grossi and is beautifully played, period scoring making
the difference.
I was thrilled to listen to the beautiful voice of Susan Gritton who brings
much colour and vigour to the proceedings. Sublimity is the keyword to this
score, in fact you only have to listen to 'Come rather goddess' to experience
the purity and marvel of Gritton's voice. Her main contribution comes in
the Second Act, especially with 'But O sad Virgin', this is wonderfully
accompanied by Jane Cole's searching cello part. Paul Agnew is also excellent
especially in the duet, 'As steals the morn upon the night'. Both Agnew and
Gritton lend searching vision to their contribution and by now, the captivating
poetry of the oratorio will have captivated the hardest of hearts! We must
not overlook Lorna Anderson's contribution, indeed in the aria, 'Sweet Bird
that shun't the noise of folly', she is particularly in the limelight.
This 14-minute aria has her exhibit all the typical Handelian vocal tricks
with the sensitive flute of Rachel Brown coaxing through proceedings. Robert
King's conducting of the choruses makes one anticipate them like water in
a drought, for as they are few and far between, they are the more welcome
especially the energic 'Populous cities please us then'. It is obvious that
this recording is now the prime recommendation for this, one of the most
sensitive of Handel oratorios. Hyperion's packaging is, as usual magnificent
with copious notes and a spectacular reproduction of 'The Shepherd' on the
front cover. Crystal clear recording and the smell of pure class sums up
another winner from The King's Consort.
Reviewer
Gerald Fenech
Performance:
Sound: