Carolyn Sampson, Robin Blaze - Handel: Great Oratorio Duets (2006)
BAND/ARTIST: Carolyn Sampson, Robin Blaze
- Title: Handel: Great Oratorio Duets
- Year Of Release: 2006
- Label: BIS Records
- Genre: Classical oratorio duets
- Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
- Total Time: 01:10:48
- Total Size: 346 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
The duets selected here from Handel’s oratorios regularly fall into the pattern of a pair of lovers singing sweet nothings to one another, though there are departures from the formula. For instance, there’s the maternal Nitocris finding her son’s conqueror Cyrus surprisingly supportive in Belshazzar, or the Christian martyrs Didymus and Theodora buoying up each other’s resolve in the oratorio named after the latter. The most dramatic is from Saul, where David’s lover Michal warns him to flee the crazed monarch in music quite different from that in which he reassures her that everything is going to be just fine.
Together they form an attractive programme, especially when the two voices are as well blended and as perfectly in tune as Carolyn Sampson’s and Robin Blaze’s. Her graceful, pearly soprano is nicely matched by his mellifluous counter-tenor, marred only by an occasional bulge of tone in the higher register.
Nicholas Kraemer and the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment provide well-schooled accompaniments, even if there’s a slight want of movement in places. But whether the mood is languid and sensual, as in Solomon, spiritual (Theodora) or consolatory (the Ode for the Birthday of Queen Anne), the performances, as well as Handel’s music, are entirely apt. George Hall
Together they form an attractive programme, especially when the two voices are as well blended and as perfectly in tune as Carolyn Sampson’s and Robin Blaze’s. Her graceful, pearly soprano is nicely matched by his mellifluous counter-tenor, marred only by an occasional bulge of tone in the higher register.
Nicholas Kraemer and the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment provide well-schooled accompaniments, even if there’s a slight want of movement in places. But whether the mood is languid and sensual, as in Solomon, spiritual (Theodora) or consolatory (the Ode for the Birthday of Queen Anne), the performances, as well as Handel’s music, are entirely apt. George Hall
Tracklist:
from Jephtha (HWV 70):
01 These labours past 06:21
from Joshua (HWV 64): 05:29
02 Oh peerless maid 02:38
03 Our limpid streams 02:51
from Balshazzar (HWV 61):
04 Great victor, at your feet I bow 04:57
from Susanna (HWV 66): 06:43
05 When thou art nigh 03:32
06 To my chaste Susanna's praise
from Theodora (HWV 68): 11:32
07 To thee, thou glorious son of worth 05:35
08 Streams of pleasure ever flowing 05:57
from Salomon (HWV 67): 07:20
09 Welcome as the dawn of day 03:53
10 Ev'ry joy that wisdom knows 03:27
from Eternal source of light divine (Ode for the birthday of Queen Anne, HWV 74):
11 Kind Health descends 04:38
from Saul (HWV 53): 04:22
12 O fairest of ten thousand fair 02:59
13 At persecution I can laugh 01:23
from Deborah (HWV 51): 08:32
14 Where do thy ardours raise me! 04:41
15 Smiling freedom, lovely guest 03:51
from Alexander Balus (HWV 65):
16 Hail wedded love 03:23
from Alexander's Feast or The Power of Musick (HWV 75):
17 Let's imitate her notes above 02:35
from Esther (HWV 50b):
18 Who calls my parting soul 03:03
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