BBC Music Magazine

Solid gold Handel with some sparkling soloists

Berta Joncus is bowled over by David Bates and La Nuova Musica’s latest, which brings opera instrument­alists out of the darkness

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Handel’s Unsung Heroes – Selections from Rinaldo, Agrippina, Rodrgio etc

Lucy Crowe (soprano), Iestyn Davies (counterten­or), Christine Rice (mezzo-soprano), Thomas Gould (violin), Joe Qiu (bassoon), Leo Duarte (oboe); La Nuova Musica/david Bates

Pentatone PTC 5186 892 71:16 min This is a stunning collection of Handel opera numbers. For originalit­y, risk-taking and erudition, it towers above its predecesso­rs. It also benefits from its mix of soloists – having chosen the music for its expressive licence, David Bates brings together worldclass vocal and instrument­al virtuosos to perform it.

The programme was inspired by Handel’s innovative opera scoring, the titular ‘Unsung Heroes’ being the many unknown instrument­alists for whom the composer crafted solos. Here Bates taps Joe

Qiu (bassoon), Paul Sharp (trumpet), Leo Duarte (oboe) and Thomas Gould (violin) to join his band La Nuova Musica alongside vocal superstars Christine Rice, Iestyn Davies and Lucy Crowe. Bates includes an unusual number of instrument­al movements from Handel operas alongside the vocal numbers, supplies his own embellishm­ents and, when conducting, gives the performers ample space to use Handel’s inventions as a launchpad for their own.

Those apt to hum along to Handel tunes may be in for a surprise. Consider ‘Scherza infida’ from Ariodante – sometimes less than nine minutes, Bates and his performers stretch it out to 11-and-a-half. It is one of Handel’s masterstro­kes that this aria’s melody tries but fails to ascend; drawing out his

sustained descending pitches, bassoonist Qiu encroaches on and at points subtly eclipses Rice, deepening the depressed mood. This heightens Handel’s classic deployment of a voicelike instrument whose timbre, colours and register generate their own effect, leaving Rice to wander into craziness through lugubrious embellishm­ents. The band halts its everdecele­rating chords before the final cadence, cratering the music in despairing silence.

Every number reaches this level of intensity, aided by the way in which tracks are grouped. In their cheeky duet ‘Or la tromba’ (Rinaldo), counterten­or Davies and trumpeter Sharp jostle to show who can alter the same motif more extravagan­tly. This is set up by the three tracks which precede it: a terse French overture, from Teseo, is followed by the ‘Marcia’ and ‘Battaglia’ from Rinaldo which both, uniquely in Handel’s operas, feature four trumpets.

Crowe’s performanc­es are just as carefully set up, and perhaps even more impressive. Bates leaves ‘V’adoro pupille’, Cleopatra’s hit aria from

Guilio Cesare, embedded in its sinfonias and exclamatio­ns from the besotted Cesare (Davies). This maintains the music’s dramatic thrust as

Crowe leaves her earthbound interlocut­or to soar effortless­ly to a top G, around which she weaves a gossamer web to conclude pianissimo on a shimmering top B natural. This all makes Cesare’s following aria, the panting ‘Se in fiorito ameno prato’ – with Gould’s solo violin passages echoing Davies in his own manner – seem a natural reaction to Crowe’s sensuality. The recording’s final track, ‘Se giunge un dispetto’ (Agrippina) is a coup de théâtre by Crowe and oboist Duarte, who speed up runs and extend added leaps beyond what I thought humanly possible.

This project is a heroic achievemen­t for all involved. PERFORMANC­E ★★★★★ RECORDING ★★★★★

Crowe and Duarte speed up runs and extend leaps beyond what I thought possible

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 ?? ?? Stepping into the light: (l-r) soloists Thomas Gould, Leo Duarte and Joe Qiu are placed centre-stage with the singers
Stepping into the light: (l-r) soloists Thomas Gould, Leo Duarte and Joe Qiu are placed centre-stage with the singers

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