The Scotsman

Handel’s Samson

- CAROL MAIN

Usher Hall

Lasting over four hours in total, Handel’s oratorio Samson was undoubtedl­y one of the Internatio­nal Festival’s lengthier events. Yet, in the high-powered performanc­e of it by Edinburgh-based Dunedin Consort on Monday evening, not a thing wavered for a moment in gripping the audience throughout the piece’s entirety.

At the helm of capturing the drama of the biblical tale of Samson and Delilah is Dunedin’s music director, John Butt. If he doesn’t already have national treasure status, then it’s time he did. In an unconditio­nally uplifting performanc­e, an exceptiona­lly fine line-up of soloists, the instrument­al ensemble playing period instrument­s and the bedrock of Dunedin, its chorus, responded to Butt’s life-affirming direction to bring the pathos of Samson’s despair alive.

In the title role, Paul Appleby was a silken-voiced tragic hero, skilfully pacing the unfolding of recitative­s and arias ultimately leading to his death and superbly complement­ed by Alice Coote’s deeply moving and powerfully sung Micah. Soloists and chorus vividly coloured Milton’s text with full-bodied clarity, particular­ly noteworthy being Sophie Bevan’s Delilah and Louise Alder in Let the Bright Seraphim.

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