HANDEL Music for Queen Caroline
View record and artist detailsRecord and Artist Details
Composer or Director: George Frideric Handel
Genre:
Vocal
Label: Les Arts Florissants Editions
Magazine Review Date: 03/2015
Media Format: CD or Download
Media Runtime: 72
Mastering:
DDD
Catalogue Number: AF004

Tracks:
Composition | Artist Credit |
---|---|
Coronation Anthems, Movement: The king shall rejoice, HWV260 |
George Frideric Handel, Composer
(Les) Arts Florissants ensemble George Frideric Handel, Composer Lisandro Abadie, Bass-baritone Sean Clayton, Tenor Tim Mead, Countertenor William Christie, Conductor |
Te Deum in D, 'Queen Caroline' |
George Frideric Handel, Composer
(Les) Arts Florissants ensemble George Frideric Handel, Composer Lisandro Abadie, Bass-baritone Sean Clayton, Tenor Tim Mead, Countertenor William Christie, Conductor |
(The) Ways of Zion do mourn |
George Frideric Handel, Composer
(Les) Arts Florissants ensemble George Frideric Handel, Composer Lisandro Abadie, Bass-baritone Sean Clayton, Tenor Tim Mead, Countertenor William Christie, Conductor |
Author: David Vickers
Queen Caroline’s funeral service at Westminster Abbey in 1737 featured the full anthem The ways of Zion do mourn. Containing a marvellous variety of affects and styles within a coherent expression of nuanced mourning, I reckon it is Handel’s greatest achievement as a composer of English church music. Christie’s liberty of adding drums rolls to the plangent string introduction is a bridge too far for my taste, but otherwise sublime slow music is sonorously satisfying and builds with emotional conviction. Gently lilting strings and the full choir’s blossoming sonorities underline the eloquence of Handel’s nostalgic memories of Caroline’s virtues in ‘When the ear heard her’. Christie’s jolting abrasiveness for ‘How are the mighty fall’n’ is a rare misstep into unpersuasive exaggeration, and the sudden retraction to inauthentic (albeit lovely) solo voices in ‘She deliver’d the poor that cried’ is an artificial contrivance that calls attention to its own unlikelihood. Christie’s handling of the archaic quick sections in ‘Their bodies are buried in peace’ is surprisingly ploddy but his judgement of the melancholic coda for strings that concludes the anthem bleakly on a bare octave (ie without harmony) is profoundly beautiful. With such a paltry discography, this performance will do nicely until the piece gets the broader recognition it deserves.
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