Handel: Acis & Galatea / Hogwood [blu-ray]

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Note: This Blu-ray Disc is only playable on Blu-ray Disc players, and not compatible with standard DVD players. George Frideric Handel ACIS AND GALATEA (Blu-ray...
Note: This Blu-ray Disc is only playable on Blu-ray Disc players, and not compatible with standard DVD players.

George Frideric Handel
ACIS AND GALATEA
(Blu-ray Disc Version)

Galatea – Danielle de Niese (soprano) / Lauren Cuthbertson (dancer)
Acis – Charles Workman (tenor) / Edward Watson (dancer)
Damon – Paul Agnew (tenor) / Steven McRae (dancer)
Polyphemus – Matthew Rose (bass) / Eric Underwood (dancer)
Coridon – Ji-Min Park (soprano) / Paul Kay (dancer)

Royal Opera House Chorus
Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment
Christopher Hogwood, conductor

Wayne McGregor, stage director

Recorded live at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London, on 8 April, 2009.

Bonus:
- Illustrated synopsis
- Cast gallery
- Documentary – Staging Acis and Galatea

Picture format: 1080i High Definition
Sound format: PCM 2.0 / DTS-HD Master Audio 5.0
Region code: 0 (worldwide)
Menu language: English
Subtitles: English (bonus features only) / French, German, Spanish
Running time: 110 mins
No. of Discs: 1 (BD 50)

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HANDEL Acis and Galatea Christopher Hogwood, cond; Danielle de Niese/Lauren Cuthbertson ( Galatea ); Charles Workman/Edward Watson ( Acis ); Paul Agnew/Steven McRae/Mellissa Hamilton ( Damon ); Ji-Min Park/Paul Kay ( Coridon ); Matthew Rose/Eric Underwood ( Polyphemus ); Royal Op Extra Cho & Ballet; O of the Age of Enlightenment (period instruments) OPUSARTE BD7056 D (Blu-ray: 110:00) Live: Covent Garden 4/8/2009


As you can tell from the headnote, this production is double-cast (in one case, triple-cast), but not in the usual way; the first name listed for each character is that of the singer, and after that comes the name of the dancer(s) assigned to shadow or echo the actions and emotions of the character. It may sound contrived, but this actually is a marvelous way to amplify the text, and frankly to relieve the score of its sometimes static nature. Handel wrote Acis and Galatea as a masque, which for practical purposes today means a secular cantata stringing together da capo arias and a few choruses, and so he had no reason to fill in several important gaps in the action that would help explain character motivation or simply specify between numbers how we got from there to here. Acis doesn’t quite work as an opera, but this version directed and choreographed by Wayne McGregor makes the best case for its stageworthiness without resorting to musical interpolations.


Not much happens in the pastoral prologue, in which the river nymph Galatea and the shepherd Acis make goo-goo eyes at each other, to the occasinal commentary of onlookers. Things go bad in the second half, where the jeaolous and volcanic Polyphemus eventually kills Acis; in best Ovidian fashion, the young man’s gushing blood is transformed into a river.


McGregor’s choreography fuses elements of ballet with hep Audrey Hepburn-style 1950s modern dance; the dancers, all of them excellent, do not so much act out what the singers are going on about as echo their emotions, although a few gestures do sometimes conform to specific words in the text. The cast is headed by Danielle de Niese, a fine Handel singer who also happens to look the part of a delectable nymph. In the role of Acis, however, Charles Workman’s singing is little better than, well, workmanlike—competent, but little more. Bass Matthew Rose is a rich-voiced Polyphemus, whose only fault is that he tends to miss the humor in his music (perhaps director McGregor wanted him to seem more threatening, which he certainly does). In their smaller roles, Paul Agnew and Ji-Min Park are very good, and it’s too bad Handel doesn’t give us a chance to hear more of them.


Hildegard Bechtler’s set starts off in traditional pastoral mode, but through the course of the performance gradually decays into dark abstraction as the lovers’ lives fall apart; her costumes for the singers are drawn more or less from the mid 20th-century English countryside, while the dancers wear slightly gussied-up bodysuits.


Christopher Hogwood leads typically crisp playing by the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, although there’s more emotional nuance to be found in the audio-only performances under King (Hyperion), Gardiner (Archiv), and Christie (Erato, if you can find it). This version may not displace your CD favorite, but as an audio-visual presentation it’s perfectly good, and often better than that (especially when de Niese has the stage). There’s nothing out-of-the-ordinary to report about the high-definition video and audio quality; the total time in the headnote includes a bit more than 10 minutes of special features—a little documentary and the usual illustrated synopsis.


FANFARE: James Reel


Product Description:


  • Release Date: April 27, 2010


  • UPC: 809478070566


  • Catalog Number: OA BD7056D


  • Label: Opus Arte


  • Number of Discs: 1


  • Composer: George Frideric Handel


  • Conductor: Christopher Hogwood


  • Orchestra/Ensemble: Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, Royal Opera House Covent Garden Chorus


  • Performer: Charles Workman, Danielle De Niese, Ji-Min Park, Matthew Rose, Paul Agnew