Devieilhe and Desandre interact vividly in recitative, and in their arias strike an ideal balance between refinement and intensity
Richard Wigmore is bowled over by Sabine Devieilhe and Lea Desandre, alongside Emmanuelle Haïm and Le Concert d’Astrée, in an exquisite recording of Handel cantatas
Handel ‘Italian Cantatas’ Aminta e Fillide, HWV83a. Armida abbandonata, HWV105b. La Lucrezia, HWV145c. Trio Sonata, Op 2 No 1 HWV386b ab Sabine Devieilhe sop bcLea Desandre mez Le Concert d’Astrée / Emmanuelle Haïm hpd/org Erato F (two discs for the price of one) 9029 56336-2 (96’ • DDD • T/t) The Arcadia evoked in Handel’s Italian cantatas can be a pretty cruel and cynical place, especially if you’re an amorous swain. Time and again the assorted Tirsis, Filenos and Dalisos pine in vain for their heartless Amarillis and Cloris. Aminta e Fillide – an unstaged miniature opera for two voices – is a rare case where the man gets lucky. Having determinedly set herself against Cupid’s wiles, the shepherdess Fillide is finally won over by the shepherd Aminta’s sheer constancy. Here, for once, Arcadia lives up to its billing.
Heard here in the expanded version Handel prepared for performance in the Marquis Ruspoli’s sumptuous gardens in July 1708, Aminta e Fillide is one of the most enticing, melodically piquant works from his Italian years. As with so many of his Italian cantatas, Handel lovers coming to Aminta e Fillide for the first time are likely to have a pleasurable sense of déjà entendu. Never one to waste a good idea, he was quick to recycle many of the cantata’s arias, first in his Venice opera Agrippina, then in his early London works. Aminta’s lament ‘Se vago rio’, hovering hauntingly between major and minor, became the Sirens’ Song in Rinaldo, while Fillide’s blissful final ‘Non si può dar un cor’ morphed into a pastoral aria in the Ode for the Birthday of Queen Anne.
Handel composed Aminta e Fillide for two sopranos, one of whom was the young Margherita Durastanti, Ruspoli’s house singer whose association with Handel endured for over a quarter of a century – easily a record. Previous recordings of this delectable work have likewise used a pair of sopranos, notably Gillian Fisher and Patrizia Kwella in the recording directed by Denys Darlow (Hyperion, 12/84), and Nuria Rial and Grazia Schiavo with La Risonanza (Glossa, 12/08). Even allowing for the inevitable
28 GRAMOPHONE RECORDINGS OF THE YEAR 2018
Click on a CD cover to buy/stream from gramophone.co.uk
Subscribe for unlimited and fully-searchable access to the digital archive of Gramophone stretching back to April 1923 across web, iOS and Android devices.