Rinaldo, The English Concert, Barbican review - Bicket's band steals the spotlight

★★★★ RINALDO, THE ENGLISH CONCERT, BARBICAN Bicket's band steals the spotlight

Handel's London opera still serves up the sensations 300 years later

It was the work with which Handel conquered London, the Italian opera that finally wooed a suspicious English audience to the charms of Dr Johnson’s “exotic and irrational entertainment”. Three hundred years later, neither Rinaldo nor London’s audience has changed much.

Orlando, La Nuova Musica, SJSS review - Handel painted in primary colours

★★★ ORLANDO, LA NUOVA MUSICA, SJSS Handel painted in primary colours

Comedy turned caricature in this rather heavy-handed performance

The advertising for La Nuova Musica’s Orlando billed it as “Handel’s most psychologically complex opera”. Whether or not you agree (and there are plenty of heavyweight rivals – Alcina, Giulio Cesare and Agrippina just for starters) there’s also the issue that it’s only half the story.

Classical CDs Weekly: Antheil, Barsanti, Handel, Laks

CLASSICAL CDS WEEKLY Fun sounds from a self-confessed bad boy, a snapshot of musical life in 18th century Scotland, beguiling chamber works from an Auschwitz survivor

Fun sounds from a self-confessed bad boy, a snapshot of musical life in 18th century Scotland, and beguiling chamber works from an Auschwitz survivor


Antheil's Jazz SymphonyAntheil: A Jazz Symphony, Piano Concerto No. 1, Capital of the Word, Archipelago “Rhumba” Frank Dupree (piano), Deutsche Staatsphilharmonie Rheinland-Pfalz/Karl-Heinz Steffens (Capriccio)

Radamisto, Guildhall School, Milton Court

Handel's late opera gets a witty reimagining

''…after various Accidents, it comes to pass that he recovers both Her and his Kingdom”. Handel's Radamisto may be a tale of warring kingdoms, noble self-sacrifice and mature, wedded love, but it’s also a fairly daft piece of dramatic belief-suspension, whose various knotty conflicts get miraculously untangled in a brisk few bars of recitative, just in time for a rousing final chorus and whatever the ancient Armenian version is of a nice cup of tea.

theartsdesk in Göttingen: Handel for all

Dazzling singers, clavichord at sunrise and a generous spirit in the heart of Germany

"Love is in the air," croons or rather bellows presenter Juri Tetzlaff, getting his audience of adults and children to bellow back the wordless refrain, arms swaying above their heads. Mezzo Sophie Rennert, dragged up as noble Lotario, and soprano Marie Lys as widowed princess Adelaide dance tenderly to the strains. They're not singing one of the most ravishing love duets in opera this morning because this is the one-hour family version of Handel's Lotario.

Ariodante, The English Concert, Bicket, Barbican

The orchestra was the real hero in this superb concert performance of Handel's opera

To hear The English Concert playing Handel is to arrive in technicolour Oz after a lifetime of black and white baroque in Kansas. We’re not short on period bands in the UK, but few bring this music into anything like the kind of focus that Harry Bicket and his crack team of musicians achieve, nor demonstrate such love and joy in the process.

Alceste, Early Opera Company, Curnyn, Wigmore Hall

★★★★ ALCESTE, EARLY OPERA COMPANY Joy unalloyed in Handel's far from tragic incidental music for a classical drama

Joy unalloyed in Handel's far from tragic incidental music for a classical drama

A wife dies to save her husband; a hero goes to hell and back to retrieve her from the underworld. Nothing of this dark myth, other than a rollicking row across the Styx from a bass singing Charon, ferryman of the dead, remains in Handel's incidental music to Alceste, a play on the subject by Tobias Smollett (of Roderick Random fame) which never reached a putatively extravagant Covent Garden staging and which has vanished from sight.