Texte paru dans: / Appeared in:
Harmonia
Mundi |
|
Reviewer: David
Vickers
Classic Dixit pairing from
Bates’s London ensemble
Handel offers greater rhetorical drama but Bates wisely judges that the pace of the opening chorus should be dictated by the singers’ natural declamation of the line ‘Sede a dextris meis’ rather than the commonplace temptation of rushing at the introductory ritornello like an irritable bull in a china shop; there is less wisdom in Christopher Lowrey’s prolonged high note in ‘Virgam virtutis’ but Anna Dennis’s ‘Tecum principium’ is solemnly eloquent. I am not entirely sold on the Frenchstyle over-dotting in ‘Judicabit in nationibus’ but the 15-strong choir packs plenty of punch at ‘conquassabit capita’ and in the tautly controlled doxology. A metaphorical bridge between the two psalms is provided by Lucy Crowe’s stratospheric virtuosity in Vivaldi’s motet In furore iustissimae irae (composed for Rome almost 20 years after Handel’s psalm); the frenetic first aria’s embellishments will dazzle many but I particularly appreciated Crowe’s gorgeous soft singing in the slower ‘Tunc meus fletus’. |
|
|
|
Cliquez l'un ou l'autre
bouton pour découvrir bien d'autres critiques de CD |