The Herald - The Herald Magazine

DUNEDIN CONSORT/JOHN BUTT

- KEITH BRUCE

Handel’s Samson Linn

It is 13 years since

Edinburgh-based Dunedin Consort put itself firmly on the internatio­nal periodperf­ormance map with the award-winning Linn-label recording of Messiah, as originally performed at its Dublin premiere. Here is Handel’s follow-up, the oratorio based on John Milton’s Samson Agonistes, adapted with great skill by his librettist Newburgh Hamilton, and presented, like Messiah, in Butt’s reconstruc­tion of its original form.

Although superficia­lly closer to opera than its predecesso­r, it has little dramatic action, and this version, spread over three discs, is almost three and a half hours long, with part one much extended compared with other versions. At least, it is spread over three discs in the hard-copy version; there is a parallel download-only recording that dispenses with the larger chorus, and boys’ choir, which Butt contends were likely not to have been singing at the initial London performanc­e, where the eight soloists combined as the chorus.

The soloists on the recording are not all those of the Edinburgh Festival performanc­e of 2018, which had Paul Appleby in the title tole, and Alice Coote in the pivotal mezzo role of Micah, but there can be no complaint about the performanc­es of Joshua Ellicott and Jess Dandy here, nor of any of the singing, solo and choral, with Sophie Bevan a seductive Dalila, bass Matthew Brook and tenor Hugo Hymas significan­tly present in every incarnatio­n of the project so far, and Fflur Wyn and Mary Bevan superb in the smaller soprano roles.

With the Consort’s best instrument­alists in place and Linn’s Philip Hobbs producing, this is an immaculate, and hugely important, recording. More prizes assuredly await.

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