Boston’s Handel and 
                Haydn Society was founded in 1815 and 
                Christopher Hogwood became their director 
                in 1986, when they moved to performing 
                on period instruments. They recorded 
                Handel’s Op. 3 Concerti Grossi in 1988 
                and went on to record the Op. 6 Concerti 
                Grossi in 1991. Avie have now reissued 
                both recordings in this boxed set. 
              
 
              
This pairing of both 
                sets raises some interesting issues 
                regarding the primacy (or not) of the 
                printed text over the composer’s autograph. 
                Handel came to publishing late and much 
                of his early work, if printed at all, 
                was issued in pirate editions. There 
                are indications that John Walsh’s publication 
                of the Op. 3 set was originally going 
                to be a pirate edition, but in the end 
                it was issued with Handel’s imprimatur. 
                But quite how much Handel had to do 
                with the set is debatable; Walsh undoubtedly 
                had access to Handel’s manuscripts but 
                it was Walsh who made the selection 
                ... and published the wrong closing 
                movement for Concerto no. 6. Handel 
                certainly did not re-work the material 
                for publication as he did for the Op. 
                4 Organ Concertos which Walsh issued 
                after the Op. 3 Concerti Grossi. 
              
 
              
So it should come as 
                no surprise that he wrote the Op. 6 
                Concerti Grossi for publication. Well, 
                up to a point. In fact, he needed a 
                draw for his 1739-40 season; his first 
                season of all-English, unstaged works. 
                So the Op. 6 concertos, with their Op. 
                no. recalling Corelli’s Op. 6 set of 
                12 string concertos, were designed to 
                appeal to the London cognoscenti. For 
                his theatre performances Handel performed 
                the Op. 6 Concerti Grossi with wind 
                parts, though they were printed as just 
                string pieces. 
              
 
              
On this disc, the Haydn 
                and Handel Society ignore Walsh’s edition 
                of the Op. 3 concertos and return to 
                Handel’s orchestrations from manuscripts 
                ante-dating Walsh’s publication. They 
                also play the correct movements for 
                the 6th concerto. But for 
                the Op. 6 Concerti Grossi they ignore 
                Handel’s apparent intentions with regard 
                to wind parts and play the works just 
                with strings. 
              
 
              
So for the Op. 3 concertos, 
                printed with Handel’s imprimatur if 
                not his direct involvement, they perform 
                according to Handel’s manuscript intentions. 
                But for the Op. 6 set they ignore his 
                own performances and stick to the printed 
                score. 
              
 
              
These picky little 
                details need not matter if the performances 
                are good. And with works as great as 
                these there is plenty of room for a 
                variety of interpretation. 
              
 
              
The recording of the 
                Op. 3 concertos was made with 14 violins, 
                5 violas, 4 cellos and 2 double basses. 
                The results are crisp, lively and attractive, 
                with some lovely solo playing. But what 
                struck me most, compared to a performance 
                such as that recorded by Tafelmusik 
                and Jeanne Lamon, was the sense of comfortable 
                amplitude as if recorded by a bigger 
                group - even though Tafelmusik are only 
                slightly smaller. 
              
 
              
Tafelmusik’s performance 
                is crisper and more incisive, whereas 
                Hogwood and the Haydn and Handel Society 
                seem to be more mellow and equally appealing, 
                though there are occasionally hints 
                of instability in the string ensemble. 
              
 
              
The feeling of mellow 
                amplitude carries over into the Op. 
                6 Concerti Grossi. Compared to Pinnock’s 
                recording with the English Concert, 
                the Haydn and Handel Society provide 
                a smoother string tone with more depth. 
                They have a soft grained delicacy in 
                the solo sections and there is a lovely 
                sense of line in all the string playing. 
                Whereas the English Concert are crisp 
                with lively articulation, the playing 
                vivid, more articulated than the Haydn 
                and Handel Society. 
              
 
              
I enjoyed the performances 
                immensely and they provide a nice contrast 
                to my existing favourites. It is enterprising 
                of Avie to rescue them from Decca’s 
                vaults. 
              
Robert Hugill