We 
                  know surprisingly little about the first performance of Handel’s 
                  Water Music. Surviving sources are inconsistent about 
                  exactly what happened as the King travelled by barge, dined 
                  and then travelled by barge again; we don’t even know what music 
                  was played. No score survives from that event, so we must hazard 
                  a guess as to the instrumentation used. The surviving scores 
                  were mainly produced between 1722 and 1743 and not all agree 
                  on the exact arrangement of movements.
                The 
                  work dates from 1717, during Handel’s earliest years in London 
                  and became deservedly popular. It has traditionally been presented 
                  in three suites; the first in F major with prominent horn parts, 
                  the second in D major with prominent trumpet parts and the more 
                  chamber scale G major suite. It is generally assumed that the 
                  music in the G major suite was played whilst the King was dining 
                  - on dry land - and often conductors place the G major suite 
                  in the middle. On this disc Kevin Mallon has stuck to the traditional 
                  ordering of movements. 
                In 
                  the CD booklet, Mallon describes his experiences as a student 
                  in Manchester studying an 18th century score of the 
                  work with John Eliot Gardiner and how the Air in the Suite in 
                  F major was marked presto. Mallon says he has striven 
                  to bring this type of lift to all the music and certainly he 
                  adopts fast tempi in the overtures and dances. He has also added 
                  percussion to the dances. 
                The 
                  Aradia play the music with style, giving lithe, shapely performances. 
                  Their general approach seems to reflect a more chamber view 
                  of the work. Jeanne Lamon and Tafelmusik give a rather bigger-boned 
                  performance, the sort that we might have heard drifting across 
                  the water in 1717, whereas Mallon gives us lightness and crispness 
                  with a light-boned feel, as if we were hearing it in a concert 
                  hall. This is not a question of a difference in size between 
                  the groups - they are both roughly the same size - but more 
                  one of tempo and of approach. Interestingly, Kevin Mallon played 
                  second violin on the Tafelmusik recording.
                I 
                  liked the general orchestral balance and feel of the performance, 
                  though I thought that there might be the hint of the odd untidy 
                  detail in the orchestral playing. 
                Mallon 
                  and his group pair the Water Music with the equally popular 
                  Firework Music that was written towards the end of Handel’s 
                  career for the celebrations for the Peace of Aix-la-Chappelle 
                  in 1749. The two works making a remarkable pair of bookends 
                  to Handel’s English career. Though he wrote a considerable amount 
                  of orchestral music, these two works have been both remarkably 
                  influential and remarkably popular.
                The 
                  Firework Music was written for wind ensemble - at King 
                  George’s request, there were no fiddles in the ensemble. Though 
                  the first performance with fireworks was a bit of a fiasco, 
                  with one of the pavilions catching fire, a remarkable 12,000 
                  people attended the public rehearsal of the work in Vauxhall 
                  Gardens. Handel added string parts to the piece for a charity 
                  performance in aid of Thomas Coram’s Foundation and it is in 
                  this form that we know it.
                I 
                  would advise anyone who is interested in the Fireworks Music 
                  to investigate one of the recordings which reconstruct the original 
                  wind-band version; Sir Charles Mackerras has recorded one and 
                  Trevor Pinnock and the English Concert have recorded another. 
                  On this disc Mallon and his forces give us the traditional version 
                  with string parts. As with the Water Music Mallon emphasises 
                  the more chamber aspects of this music. The opening of the Fireworks 
                  Music is suitably big-boned, but Mallon provides some charming 
                  intimate moments. In La Paix he follows an early manuscript 
                  in ascribing the solo to transverse flute, to charming effect.
                These 
                  are attractive performances and if you are short of the works 
                  I have no qualms in recommending the recording at budget price. 
                  Some of the more expensive discs give slightly more sophisticated 
                  instrumental playing, but the Aradia Ensemble offer us infectious 
                  enthusiasm, youth and charm. What more could we ask for?
                Robert Hugill
                see also Review 
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