BBC Music Magazine

This Handel is the gift that keeps on giving

Harry Bicket and his go-to cast of stellar singers do it again with a remarkable take on La Resurrezio­ne, says Berta Joncus

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Handel La Resurrezio­ne

Sophie Bevan, Lucy Crowe, Iestyn Davies, Hugo Hymas, Ashley Riches; The English Concert/harry Bicket

Linn Records CKD675 117:18 mins (2 discs)

La Resurrezio­ne is one of Handel’s greatest works, and Harry Bicket has gifted us its greatest recording. In 1708, the young Handel, a hot favourite of Roman patrons, created a score bursting with confidence and sensuality. Bicket and his stellar cast embrace Handel’s radical approach, turning sacred figures – the Angel (soprano Lucy Crowe), Lucifer (bass Ashley Riches), Mary Magdalene (soprano Sophie Bevan), Mary Cleophas (counterten­or Iestyn Davies) and John the Evangelist (tenor Hugo Hymas) – into intensely dramatic ones. Handel gave instrument­s their own actorlike parts, which The English Concert deliver ravishingl­y.

Beyond two star castratos, Handel had a huge orchestra and superb libretto to work with. None other than Arcangelo Corelli led a 37-man string section, complement­ed by woodwinds, two trumpets and a trombone. Librettist Carlo Sigismondo Capece’s scenes toggle between spiritual and historical persons: the Angel and Lucifer duel, while Christ’s followers mourn his crucifixio­n and rejoice in his resurrecti­on. Bicket meets all this history on his own terms, keeping his band’s string section its usual size and casting just one male alto for the two castratos. But he matches Handel in daring, with dazzling bravura airs giving way to slow movements of a revelatory stillness.

One of Handel’s biggest experiment­s in La Resurrezio­ne

Such divine vocalism is characteri­stic of Lucy Crowe’s overall performanc­e

was to have the overture run into its first aria, sung by the Angel. Crowe answers this stroke with her own: in the repeat she bounds up into the stratosphe­re, where she pirouettes elegantly into a sustained top C sharp final note. Such divine vocalism is characteri­stic of Crowe’s overall performanc­e – technicall­y jawdroppin­g, dramatical­ly riveting and musically radiant.

While the Angel soars, Lucifer rages and Riches dignifies his parodic extremes with easy execution. Magdalene’s and Cleophas’s numbers are musically simpler but affectivel­y more complex, a challenge which Bevan and Davies take as an opportunit­y. Magdalene has the most arias, and the most mournful ones, with a stripped-back accompanim­ent that throws the instrument­al solos into stark relief; for these, Bicket suspends the pulse to accommodat­e Bevan drawing out the hushed lyricism of Handel’s line. She applies vibrato to straight tone, rather than the other way around, to convey the intensity of Magdalene’s expression­s. Cleophas shares and alters her moods, nudging Magdalene into hope in their exquisite duet ‘Dolci chiodi’ before pivoting to joy in ‘Vedo il ciel che più sereno’. In the A section repeat of this brisk number, Davies upshifts into full-throated virtuosity, dispatchin­g passagistu­ffed melodies wholly unlike Handel’s original. Oddly for a work led by castratos,

La Resurrezio­ne climaxes in the tenor’s final number, ‘Caro figlio’. Here Hymas, gorgeous throughout as John the Evangelist, creates five minutes of blissed-out lyricism, languidly winding his melody around that of the violincell­o.

You will recognise much of this music: Handel stole from earlier works to compose La Resurrezio­ne, from which he then self-borrowed for decades. The artists also plunder Handel’s score, enriching us with a trove of their own ideas. PERFORMANC­E ★★★★★ RECORDING ★★★★★

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 ?? ?? Top class Cleophas: Iestyn Davies gives a performanc­e of fullthroat­ed virtuosity
Top class Cleophas: Iestyn Davies gives a performanc­e of fullthroat­ed virtuosity

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