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Monday 9 November 2020

Mosaic Select 30: Boogie Woogie and Blues Piano


"While most Mosaic limited-edition boxed sets concentrate on recordings by an individual bandleader or a single record label, 'Boogie Woogie and Blues Piano' features sessions by a number of different artists from several labels active in the 1930s and early '40s, when boogie-woogie was very popular. Fifteen different pianists are featured (if one counts Lionel Hampton playing two fingered-duo piano in a band setting), though it is the giants of the genre, Meade "Lux" Lewis, Pete Johnson, Albert Ammons, and Jimmy Yancey who are given the most exposure. The first three are individually paired (Johnson and Ammons) and play together as a trio, occasionally accompanying blues vocalist Joe Turner or adding a superfluous rhythm section. Lewis is clearly the most inventive of them all, especially when performing his hit 'Honky Tonk Train Blues' (revived in a big-band setting by rocker Keith Emerson during the '70s) or his lesser-known 'Whistlin' Blues'. Ammons has the strongest rhythmic sense, as displayed in the two takes of 'Shout for Joy'. Johnson is heard in several small group sessions as well, featuring Turner along with alto saxophonist Buster Smith and trumpeter Hot Lips Page. Yancey, who was recorded more sporadically than Lewis, Johnson, and Ammons, is extensively featured, playing solo, accompanying singer Faber Smith and occasionally singing himself. Yancey's slower, blues-drenched style is unmistakable for anyone else, highlighted by his own 'Yancey Stomp' and the two takes of 'Yancey's Bugle Call'. There is a sampling of other pianists, including Joe Sullivan, Mary Lou Williams (who played nearly every style that appeared during her lifetime with authority), Teddy Wilson (who never considered himself a talented boogie-woogie player), Nat King Cole, and Sir Charles Thompson (each of whom duets with Hampton and the more commercial Freddie Slack. The blues piano sessions of Cripple Clarence Lofton wrap this enjoyable collection with a flourish. The sound restoration and Dan Morgenstern's excellent liner notes add to the value of this limited-edition compilation." (Review by Ken Dryden from AllMusic. See here.)

1.1. Meade "Lux" Lewis - Honky Tonk Train Blues
1.2. Meade "Lux" Lewis - Whistlin' Blues
1.3. Meade "Lux" Lewis - Bear Cat Crawl
1.4. Albert Ammons - Shout For Joy
1.5. Albert Ammons - Shout For Joy
1.6. Joe Turner & Pete Johnson - Goin' Away Blues
1.7. Joe Turner & Pete Johnson - Roll 'Em Pete
1.8. Meade "Lux" Lewis, Pete Johnson & Albert Ammons - Boogie Woogie Prayer (Pt. 1)
1.9. Meade "Lux" Lewis, Pete Johnson & Albert Ammons - Boogie Woogie Prayer (Pt. 2)
1.10. Pete Johnson - Boogie Woogie
1.11. Harry James - Boo-Woo
1.12. Harry James - Boo-Woo
1.13. Harry James - Woo-Woo
1.14. Harry James - Woo-Woo
1.15. Harry James - Home James
1.16. Harry James - Jesse
1.17. Pete Johnson & Albert Ammons - Boogie Woogie Man
1.18. Pete Johnson & Albert Ammons - Barrel House Boogie
1.19. Pete Johnson & Albert Ammons - Cuttin' The Boogie
1.20. Pete Johnson & Albert Ammons - Foot Pedal Boogie
1.21. Pete Johnson & Albert Ammons - Walkin' The Boogie
1.22. Pete Johnson & Albert Ammons - Sixth Avenue Express
1.23. Pete Johnson & Albert Ammons - Pine Creek
1.24. Pete Johnson & Albert Ammons - Movin' The Boogie

2.1. Pete Johnson - Cherry Red
2.2. Pete Johnson - Baby, Look At You
2.3. Pete Johnson - Jump For Joy
2.4. Pete Johnson - Lovin' Mama Blues
2.5. Meade "Lux" Lewis, Pete Johnson & Albert Ammons - Cafe Society Rag
2.6. Joe Sullivan - Low Down Dirty Shame
2.7. Joe Sullivan - I Can't Give You Anything But Love
2.8. Joe Sullivan - I Can't Give You Anything But Love
2.9. Benny Carter - Joe Turner Blues
2.10. Benny Carter - Joe Turner Blues
2.11. Benny Carter - Beale Street Blues
2.12. Benny Carter - Beale Street Blues
2.13. Will Bradley - Down The Road A Piece
2.14. Will Bradley - Down The Road A Piece
2.15. Will Bradley - Down The Road A Piece
2.16. Ray McKinley & Freddie Slack - Southpaw Serenade
2.17. Ray McKinley & Freddie Slack - Southpaw Serenade
2.18. Will Bradley - Basin Street Boogie
2.19. Will Bradley - Basin Street Boogie
2.20. Teddy Wilson - A Touch Of Boogie
2.21. Lionel Hampton - The Munson Street Breakdown
2.22. Lionel Hampton - Central Avenue Breakdown
2.23. Lionel Hampton - Bouncing At The Beacon
2.24. Henry "Red" Allen - K.K. Boogie
2.25. Henry "Red" Allen - K.K. Boogie

3.1. Mary Lou Williams - Little Joe From Chicago
3.2. Jimmy Yancey - Yancey Stomp
3.3. Jimmy Yancey - State Street Special
3.4. Jimmy Yancey - Tell 'Em About Me
3.5. Jimmy Yancey - Five O'Clock Blues
3.6. Jimmy Yancey - Slow And Easy Blues
3.7. Jimmy Yancey - The Mellow Blues
3.8. Jimmy Yancey - I Received A Letter
3.9. Jimmy Yancey - East St. Louis Blues
3.10. Jimmy Yancey - Bear Trap Blues
3.11. Jimmy Yancey - Old Quaker Blues
3.12. Jimmy Yancey - Cryin' In My Sleep
3.13. Jimmy Yancey - Death Letter Blues
3.14. Jimmy Yancey - Death Letter Blues
3.15. Jimmy Yancey - Yancey's Bugle Call
3.16. Jimmy Yancey - Yancey's Bugle Call
3.17. Jimmy Yancey - 35th And Dearborn
3.18. Jimmy Yancey - 35th And Dearborn
3.19. Cripple Clarence Lofton - Strut That Thing
3.20. Cripple Clarence Lofton - Monkey Man Blues
3.21. Cripple Clarence Lofton - Policy Blues
3.22. Cripple Clarence Lofton - Brown Skin Gal
3.23. Cripple Clarence Lofton - You Done Tore Your Playhouse Down

Marc-Antoine Charpentier - David & Jonathas


"Marc-Antoine Charpentier's Biblical tragedy ('tragédie Biblique'), 'David et Jonatahas' (H. 490), with a libretto by Père Bretonneau, was performed at the Collège Louis-le-Grand in Paris on 28 February 1688. It was revived in 1706 and 1715 (Collège d'Harcourt), and later at other Jesuit colleges, at Amiens and La Flèche (1741) among others. 'David et Jonathas' has nothing in common with the 'tragédie lyrique' composed by Lully; for instance, the prologue is an integral, overlapping part of the work (on the model of the Italian opera). It is a piece of sacred music destined for the divine office, of a profoundly inward, meditative character. The main body of the work resembles a statis theatrical piece, the five acts appearing to be vertiable psychological tableaux for each of the principal characters. Recitative (i.e. the action) is virtually entirely absent from the work which abounds in elaborately developed 'airs', often with orchestral accompaniment (such as the 'air' of Jonathan, 'A-t-on jamais souffert' in Act IV), choruses, 'simphonies' and dance numbers. 'David et Jonathas' was intended to serve as an interlude for a five-act Latin tragedy by Père Chamillart, 'Saül', recited by the pupils of the college. The complete work therefore consisted of eleven acts (prologue of 'David', Act I of 'Saül', Act I of 'David', and so on), and the spoken Latin text overlapped the sun French one. All of the action was concentrated in 'Saül'.

"There is no action in 'David et Jonathas' because it had just been narrated in 'Saül': the two works were interwoven with one another. But the matter is rendered even more complex by the fact that 'David', on the one hand, and 'Saül', on the other, are not one and the same drama, but two contrasting aspects of the same drama, each one reacting on the other, thereby investing one another with greater power. The 'Saül' + 'David' structure does not show the drama of one -or- the other, but alternatively both the one -and- the other. The psychology of the characters is increasingly refined, each gesture being presented to the spectator with its various consequences in the two camps: the characters appear all the more human as their actions are contradictory or are received as such in the two camps; they seem more objectively real. 'Saül' is set in the camp of the Israelites, 'David' in that of the Philistines, their enemies. We are not very far from the multiple-scene theatre of today.

"Almost unique in its genre, because there was only one 'precedent' - in 1687 ('Celse', also by Charpentier, but this work is lost), the project presents something of the aspect of a wager; it dates from 1688, and was thus composed immediately after the death of Lully, as if to challenge the operatic monopoly of the Royal Academy. The audience was not mistaken, by the way, when it applauded 'David' and dropped 'Zéphire et Flore' by M. de Lully le Cadet, performed at the same period on the prestigious stage of the Royal Academy of Music: the chronicler of the 'Mercure' (March 1688) devoted an article of five pages to the former while dismissing the latter in a few rigid lines.

"Until 1687 the Lullyist type of the 'tragédie lyrique' seemed to be the only possible operatic principle in France. At the same time the (modernist) concepts regarding the imitation of the ancients were defended by Perrault, Longepierre, Fontenelle and others. It was highly tempting to young authors to create a new type of operatic spectacle, particularly since Lully was no longer there to enforce his monopoly. The Lullyist type of the 'tragédie lyrique' aimed at being an imitation of the great tragedies of ancient Greece. 'David et Jonathas', composed by Charpentier at the age of 44, during a crucial period, cannot be regarded in any other way but as a counter-proposition to the Quinault-Lully model, as were other, by the way, such as Racine's 'Esther' and 'Athalie'.

"'David et Jonathas' is an opera and by no means an oratorio. As if to cut short any possible disput on the subject, Marc-Antonine Charpentier had composed an oratorio on the same subject in 1681-82, 'Mors Saülis et Jonathae' (H. 403)." (Jean Duron. From the liner notes.)

Performers: Les Arts Florissants, William Christie, Gérard Lesne, Monique Zanetti, Jean-François Gardeil

1.1. Prologue: Ouverture
1.2. Prologue, Scène I: 'Où Suis-je? Qu'ai-je Fait?'
1.3. Prologue, Scène II: 'Dois-je Éprouver Le Secours De Vos Charmes?'
1.4. Prologue, Scène III: 'Retirez-vous Affreux Tonnerre'
1.5. Prologue, Scène IV: 'Quelle Importune Voix Vient Troubler Mon Repos?'
1.6. Prologue, Scène V: 'C'est Assez? Ai-je Enfin Épuisé Ta Colère?'
1.7. Acte I: Marche Triomphante
1.8. Acte I, Scène I: 'Du Plus Grand Des Héros Publions Les Exploits'
1.9. Acte I, Scène II: 'Allez, Le Ciel Jaloux Attend Un Légitime Hommage'
1.10. Acte I, Scène III: 'Ciel! Quel Triste Combat En Ces Lieux Me Rappelle?'
1.11. Acte I, Scène IV: 'Le Ciel Enfin Favorable À Mes Vœux'
1.12. Acte I: Menuet
1.13. Acte II: Prélude
1.14. Acte II, Scène I: 'Quel Inutile Soins En Ces Lieux Vous Arrête?'
1.15. Acte II, Scène II: 'Dépit Jaloux, Haine Cruelle'
1.16. Acte II, Scène III: 'A Votre Bras Vainqueur Rien Ne Peut Résister'
1.17. Acte II: Chaconne

2.1. Acte III: Symphonie d'Ouverture
2.2. Acte III, Scène I: 'Ah! Je Dois Assurer Et Ma Vie Et L'Empire'
2.3. Acte III, Scène II: 'Objet D'une Implacable Haine'
2.4. Acte III, Scène III: 'David Peut-il Attendre Un Retour Favorable?'
2.5. Acte III: Gigue
2.6. Acte IV: Prélude
2.7. Acte IV, Scène I: 'Souverain Juge Des Mortels'
2.8. Acte IV, Scène II: 'Vous Me Fuyez'
2.9. Acte IV, Scène III: 'A-t-on Jamais Souffert Une Plus Rude Peine?'
2.10. Acte IV, Scène IV: 'Venez, Seigneur, Venez: Säul Va Vous Attendre'
2.11. Acte IV, Scène V: 'Enfin, Vous M'écoutez, Seigneur?'
2.12. Acte IV: Rigaudon
2.13. Acte IV: Bourrée
2.14. Acte V: Bruits d'Armes
2.15. Acte V, Scène I: 'Courez: Säul Attend Un Secours Nécessaire'
2.16. Acte V, Scène II: 'Que Vois-je? Quoi Je Perds Mon Fils & Mon Empire!'
2.17. Acte V, Scène III: 'Victoire! Victoire!'
2.18. Acte V, Scène IV: 'Qu'on Sauve Jonathas... Allez...'
2.19. Acte V, Scène V: 'Vois, Traître, Et Reconnais Ta Nouvelle Victime'
2.20. Acte V, Scène VI: 'Joignez À Vos Exploits L'Honneur Du Diadème'
2.21. Acte V: Chœur Des Triomphants

Georg Friedrich Händel - Agrippina


"In the summer of 1703 the eighteen-year-old Handel left his native Halle for Hamburg, where he found work at the Gansemarkt opera house, gradually rising through the ranks from back-desk violinist until his first opera, 'Almira', was premiered there in January 1705. Less than two months later, the Gansemarkt produced his second opera, 'Nero', the music for which is lost, though Friedrich Christian Feustking's libretto has a plot similar to that of Busenello's 'L'incoronazione di Poppea'. By mid-1706, having become increasingly fascinated by Italianate music, Handel resolved to travel to Italy at his own expense to develop his craft. By the end of the year he was in Rome, and was to spend the next three years in the Italian peninsula.

"He wrote an opera for the Teatro di via del Cocomero in Florence (Rodrigo, 30 October 1707) and a serenata for an aristocratic wedding celebration near Naples ('Aci, Galatea e Polifemo', on or around 19 July 1708), but seems to have passed most of his time in Rome, where he composed his first two oratorios 'Il trionfo del Tempo e del Disinganno' (probably for its librettist Cardinal Benedetto Pamphili, in early 1707) and 'La Resurrezione' (for Marquis Francesco Maria Ruspoli, and performed on Easter Sunday, 1708) and spectacular church music composed between April and July 1707, including music for Vespers, Dixit Dominus and numerous Marian motets. He also wrote a large number of secular cantatas. The majority of these were intimate settings of Arcadian poetry for one singer with continuo accompaniment; a few were larger pastoral dramas, featuring several characters and imaginative use of small orchestras, and others were scaled somewhere in between; a few were intensely dramatic miniature tragedies. Although they date from Handel's entire period in Italy, most of these cantatas were composed in Rome for patrons who were leading lights of the Accademia degli Arcadi ('Arcadian Academy'), a group of literary, artistic, musical and aristocratic cognoscenti whose reformist ideas aimed to purify the corrupting indulgence of contemporary writing through the restoration of classical Greek simplicity.

"Having achieved as much as he could without converting to Roman Catholicism, it seems that Handel then resolved to seek a permanent position in suitably Protestant climes. In late 1709 he travelled north to Florence and then to Venice, where, according to his first biographer John Mainwaring (London, 1760), he was recognised whilst playing the harpsichord at a masked ball:

"'Being thus detected, he was strongly importuned to compose an Opera. But there was so little prospect of either honour or advantage from such an under-taking, that he was very unwilling to engage in it. At last, however, he consented, and in three weeks he finished his 'Agrippina', which was performed twenty-seven nights successively [...] The audience was so enchanted with this performance, that a stranger who should have seen the manner in which they were affected, would have imagined they had all been distracted.

"'The theatre, at almost every pause, resounded with shouts and acclamations of 'viva il caro Sassone!' and other expressions of approbation too extra-vagant to be mentioned. They were thunderstruck with the grandeur and sublimity of his style: for never had they known till then all the powers of harmony and modulation so closely arrayed, and so forcibly combined.'

"The exact dates of Agrippina's composition are unknown, but it was certainly written on Venetian paper with Handel's customary speed shortly before the first performance at the Teatro Grimani di San Giovanni Grisostomo in Venice on 26 December 1709, a couple of months before Handel's twenty-fifth birthday. The title-role was sung by Margherita Durastanti, who had begun her long association with Handel two years earlier in Rome; it is possible that she was replaced in some later performances by the Bolognese soprano Elena Croce Viviani. The cast also included Diamante Maria Scarabelli (Poppea, soprano), Valeriano Pellegrini (Nerone, soprano castrato), Antonio Francesco Carli (Claudio, bass), Francesca Vanini-Boschi (Ottone, contralto), her husband Giuseppe Boschi (Pallante, bass), Giuliano Albertini (Narciso, alto castrato) and Nicola Pasini (Lesbo, bass). The identity of the alto who sang the goddess Giunone in the opera's concluding Deus ex machina is unknown. On 11 February 1710, the London newspaper The Post-Boy reported the previous month's news from Venice:

"'Mr. Hendle's Opera, which is now performed at San Giovani Chrysostomo, is the best that ever was heard for the Musick; but the Words are but indifferent. Albino[n]i's Opera at San Cassan is also very well lik'd, both for the Words and Musick.'

"This is the only known contemporary reception of 'Agrippina'; it is also the earliest mention of Handel in an English newspaper — about eight months before he set first foot in the country that would eventually become his permanent home.

"Despite The Post-Boy's low opinion, the libretto is one of the finest that Handel set to music. Its author was almost certainly Cardinal Vincenzo Grimani (1652/5-1710), a member of the wealthy Venetian patrician family that had owned and run several of, the city's opera houses for two generations. His father Antonio and uncle Giovanni built and managed the Teatro SS Giovanni e Paolo (which opened in 1639), and in 1678 Vincenzo and his brother Giovanni Carlo inaugurated their magnificent new theatre just behind the church of San Giovanni Grisostomo, a tiny parish in the Cannaregio district not far from the Rialto (on the site of the present-day Teatro Malibran). By 1700 Venice had about sixteen opera houses, but San Giovanni Grisostomo was the largest: its stage had a particularly large proscenium and powerful stage machinery, and the auditorium was decorated with gilded boxwood reliefs and had five tiers of thirty-one boxes each, with another four on either side of the stage; including the parterre, its capacity is estimated to have been more than 1,400. It quickly established a reputation as Venice's foremost opera house, attracting the best singers and composers until well into the eighteenth century.

"At the time of Handel's arrival in Venice in late 1709, Giovanni Carlo Grimani's home was the regular meeting place of the local branch of the Arcadian Academy, so we can imagine a social connection occurring between the young Saxon visitor and the theatre's co-owner. Vincenzo Grimani had not let being ordained to the priesthood prevent him from writing the librettos 'Elmiro Re di Corinto' (set by Carlo Pallavicino for carnival, 1686/7) and 'Orazio' (set by Giuseppe Felice Tosi, 1687/8). It seems likely that his 'Agrippina' originated during the same period but was not used, perhaps because its author was banished from Venice in 1690 after the French complained about his overtly pro-Habsburg political sympathies when negotiating an alliance between the Duchy of Savoy and the Holy Roman Empire. Nevertheless, in 1697 Grimani was elevated to the rank of cardinal. Although pardoned by the Venetian Republic, he spent the remainder of his life working for the Habsburgs; on 1 July 1708 he took up his appointment as the Viceroy of Naples, where he might briefly have encountered Handel — although they had probably met in Rome in 1706-8, when Grimani was the Holy Roman Empire's representative to the Vatican. The cardinal was busy with official duties in Naples throughout the entire period of the commission, composition and performances of 'Agrippina', so it is unlikely that author and composer collaborated directly. An old spare text lying around from twenty years earlier was probably picked out for Handel, whose judicious self-borrowing from his own recent Roman and Neapolitan works (both music and words) suggests that it was refashioned for his purposes in collaboration with one or more unknown Venetian poets associated with the Grimani family's flagship theatre.

"The plot is drawn from the histories of Tacitus and Suetonius, and the drama is set in Rome, c.50 AD. The ambitious Julia Agrippina (fourth wife of the Emperor Claudius and sister of Caligula) schemes to put her son Nero (from a previous marriage to the consul Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus) on the throne. It is reported that Claudius has died in a shipwreck on his way back from an invasion of Britain. Having secured the loyalty of the influential and wealthy freedmen Marcus Antonius Pallas and Narcissus, Agrippina attempts to proclaim her son emperor - but is thwarted when news arrives that Claudius was rescued from drowning by Marcus Salvius Otho, whose reward is to be named the emperor's successor. Agrippina discredits Otho and deceives his lover Poppaca Sabina (who also fends off amorous attentions from Claudius and Nero), and when her increasingly desperate intrigues fail, she cunningly twists the truth to create an illusion of her political and emotional fidelity. Claudius reconfirms Otho as his heir and instructs Nero to marry Poppaca, but Otho renounces the throne rather than lose Poppaea— which suits Nero very well, and brings about the triumph of his devious mother. The goddess Juno descends to bless the marriage of Poppaca and Otho.

"Agrippina is a comedy of antiheroic characters with an unquenchable thirst for political and sexual power, whose amoral, corrupt and decadent intrigues are shown as intrinsic parts of everyday life among ancient Rome's ruling class. The pervasive tone of irony and humour in the subject matter is the natural by-product of a Venetian text much closer in spirit to the mischievous world view found in the operas of Cavalli and his successors than to the virtuous heroism and moral integrity championed by Apostolo Zeno, Pietro Pariati and Metastasio, the Arcadian-inspired librettists active in Venice during the first few decades of the eighteenth century. Beneath the satirical surface of Agrippina, Handel's inventive musical treatments and youthful playfulness bring to the fore an unusually wide range of emotions as his characters display by turns seductive charm, deceit, exasperation, naivety, despair, barely controlled lust, fury and gleeful one-upmanship, as well as genuine tenderness and sincere love (Poppea and Ottone are not yet the characters we find in 'L'incoronazione di Poppea', although Nerone is well on his way there).

"Handel's music vividly portrays this emotional roller coaster, notwithstanding the fact that about seventy-five per cent of the score was remodelled from works he had written in Italy over the previous three years. The opening section of the overture was adapted from the Marian motet 'Donna, che in ciel di tanta luce splendi' (probably performed in Rome on 2 February 1707). Narciso's enthusiastic reply to Agrippina's suggestive proposal in Act 1 Scene 5 ('Volo pronto', with chirpy recorders) was based on an aria from the continuo cantata L'ungi da me, pensier tiranno' (copied in August 1709 for Ruspoli in Rome). Pallante's amorous response to the same promise ('La mia sorte fortunata', I:3) was based on the jealous Polyphemus getting hot under the collar in the Neapolitan serenata 'Adi, Galatea e Polifemo', while an aria for the sea-nymph Galatea was the basis for Poppea's 'Vaghe perle', the delightful music refitted for our first encounter with the vain beauty, gleefully admiring herself in a mirror. Claudio's seductive 'Vieni, O cara' is refashioned from a slow moment in the soprano motet 'Saeviat tellus inter rigores' (probably for Carmelite vespers feasts in Rome, July 1707). From his first oratorio 'Il trionfo del Tempo e del Disinganno', Handel reworked musical material for Ottone's lonely 'Vaghe fonti', the pastoral lament with bubbling recorders evoking fountains modelled after Disinganno's 'Crede l'uom', while 'Come nube che fugge dal vento' reapplied the malevolent fury of Piacere to the psychopathic Nerone revealing his true nature in a violent tantrum: scolded by his exasperated mother for ruining his chances of becoming emperor, Nerone declares that he will abandon any interest in Poppea - a protestation that we know from history to be untrue. Two bass arias from 'La Resurrezione' were adapted, one for Claudio's boast of being conqueror of the world ('Cade il mondo', based on Lucifer's claim to have defeated God in 'Caddi, è ver'), the second for Pallante's devious promise to fulfil his part in Agrippina's murderous plot ('Col raggio placido', based on Lucifer's infernal 'O voi dell'Erebo').

"Durastanti was given several arias based on music she had sung previously for Handel in Rome, most notably 'Ho un non so che nel cor' - Mary Magdalene's words and music from 'La Resurrezione' changed only slightly to transform joy at Christ's resurrection into Agrippina's encouragement to the anxious Poppea to carry out her instructions (I:18), Perhaps Durastanti had sung the earlier incarnation of 'Non ho cor che per amarti' (I:23) in the cantata 'Qual ti riveggio, oh Dio' (Rome, 1707), and she had certainly performed the original version of 'Ogni vento, ch'al porta'; the lilting Act 1 finale, where it appears that Agrippina has secured everything she desires, was based on the fickle Fillide's 'Fiamma bella che al ciel s'invia' from the pastoral cantata 'Arvesta il passo' (Rome, 1708). Moreover, Agrippina's final aria 'Se vuoi pace? (III:I4, in which she appears to offer calm counsel to her beleaguered husband) was based on an aria Durastanti had sung as the two-timing minx 'Chloris in Clori, Tirsi e Fileno' (Rome, 1707). Several of the arias in the opera recycled music from Roman cantatas that were initially constructed using borrowings from works by Reinhard Keiser, six of them from his Hamburg opera 'Octavia' (1705) in which Handel had probably played in the orchestra.

"Poppea's 'Se giunge un dispetto' (which concludes Act 1, at which point she believes Ottone has betrayed her) is based on an aria from 'Tis fedel? tn costante?', and Ottone's lament 'Voi che udite il mio lamento' (II:5) contains material adapted from 'Alpestre monte' — both cantatas that might have originated in Florence, c. 1706-7. Agrippina's soliloquy 'Pensieri, voi mi tormentate' (II:13), her most private moment in the opera and one that exposes her anxieties as she desperately plots a triple murder to cover her treason, is a transformation of a jagged musical idea for unison strings that Handel had initially utilised for the comparably worried eponymous anti-hero midway through Rodrigo ('Siete assai superbe, o stelle'); for Agrippina's show-stealing prayer to the gods to aid her intrigues, Handel added a tormented solo oboe part, reinvented the string parts and created a new and much tauter voice part.

"Handel's autograph lacks the overture and the first, folio of the opening scene, but contains a large amount of material that he cancelled, transferred or substituted during the compositional process. A neater performing score would have been prepared for use during the 1709/10 Venice carnival, but is now missing. However, it appears to have been copied in its entirety at two different stages of the original production's run of performances. Both of the early manuscript copies are written on Venetian paper-types of the right period and the first of these, now in the British Library, appears to have been made shortly before or soon after the premiere: it contains Agrippina's 'Se vuoi pace' in F major, in accordance with Handel's instruction in the autograph for it to be transposed up from E major, and confirms that the 'Deus ex machina' for Giunone was performed after the chorus 'Lieto il Tebro'. The second copy; now held in the Austrian National Library, was probably made after the end of the run of performances; by this time, Poppea's 'Ingannata una sol volta' (II:8) had been replaced by a new aria and the final scene for Giunone had been cut. Both copies confirm that Handel's original setting of 'Pensieri, voi mi tormentate' was replaced by a new version that was, recomposed, condensed and without the unexpected coda. This recording follows customary modern-day practice in preferring Handel's first and more complex version of the scene, Other differences between Handel's autograph and the first performance are preserved in the libretto printed by Marino Rossetti (Venice, 1709), which also clarifies scene headings, stage directions and numerous small points of spelling and text. The wordbook contains a list of stage settings that includes three ballets for Germans ('Di Tedeschi'), Gardeners ('Di Giardinier') and Knights and Ladies ('Di Cavalieri, e Dame'), but their positions are not cued cither in the libretto or in the musical sources and it cannot be assumed that the lost dance music was by Handel. Moreover, after Giunone's aria at the end of the opera, the wordbook prints 'Segue il Ballo di Deita seguaci di Giunone' (There follows a dance for deities, attendants of Juno), but no music for this is known.

"A new performing edition was prepared for this recording by Peter Jones and the present author. It predominantly reconstructs the text and music given at the first performance. This means that we have chosen the shorter middle section of Ottone's 'Lusinghiera mia speranza' (I:13) and the slightly shortened version of Claudio's 'Pur ritorno a rimirarvi' (I:21). Handel's extensively recomposed final version of 'Se giunge un dispetto' has only superficial similarities to the rejected first version usually heard on other recordings. This performance adopts the simplified second section of the chorus 'Di timpani e trombe' (II:3) and prefers Handel's second setting of Nerone's 'Sotto il lauro' (14) in B-flat major because it captures Nerone's sneering mockery of Ottone's misfortune more adroitly than Handel's rejected siciliano-like E minor first setting.

"'Bella pur nel mio diletto', an elaborate virtuoso aria for Poppea in Act II Scene 6, featuring two concertante oboes and fully scored for four-part strings, was never performed by Handel. It was replaced before the first performance with 'Spera, alma mia', an entirely different text printed in the 1709 wordbook but for which no music survives. Musicologists John H. Roberts and John E. Sawyer both point out that 'Spera, alma mia' is probably a parody text that perfectly fits a simple continuo aria borrowed from 'Il trionfo del Tempo e del Disinganno' that Handel had already tried unsuccessfully to accommodate twice during the composition of Agrippina. It is recorded here in its proper context for the first time; its gentle intimacy conveys Poppea's sorrow and her uneasiness about Ottone's alleged guilt, and forms a more effective dramatic transition from Ottone's preceding soliloquy than 'Bella pur'. We have opted for the recomposed setting of Poppea's 'Ingannata una sol volta' (II:8), and Agrippina' 'Se vuoi pace' is given in its F major transposition.

"A small number of Handel's rejected ideas from his autograph have been reinstated. In addition to the first version of 'Pensicri, voi mi tormentate' we use the slightly more elaborate setting of Lesbo's arietta 'Allegrezzal!' (I:10), as he bursts in after the trumpet fanfare that heralds Claudio's safe return (the fanfare was probably improvised, but to announce the emperor's miraculous return from the grave we could not resist the mischievous appropriation of the trumpet parts from the Angel's proclamatory first aria in 'La Resurrezione'). We have reinstated a two-bar phrase that Handel deleted at the harmonically twisting climax of Ottone's suffering in 'Voi che udite il mio lamento' (on the phrase 'il mio dolor'), valuing the prolonged emotional tension it offers at the epicentre of the opera; having been unjustly scorned and abandoned by each of the characters in turn, Ottone expresses his misery echoed by a doleful oboe and the resolutions of chromatic clashing suspensions for the strings in F minor express pathos and catharsis.

"The final post-chorus scene for Giunone is included but does not form a suitable climax to the entertainment — so the 'Balli' for the followers of Juno are reconstructed using five dances selected from an orchestral suite now bound in Handel's autograph of 'Rodrigo'. Curiously, the entire overture-suite is on Venetian paper, whereas the rest of Rodrigo was written on Roman paper in advance of Handel travelling from Rome to Florence for the opera's production in autumn 1707. Perhaps these folios originated as ballet music in 'Agrippina'. We have sequenced a lively Gigue, an elegant Sarabande, an energetic Bourrée (that corresponds to Giunone's aria), a graceful Menuet (that has the same music as the chorus 'Lieto il Tebro'), and we conclude with an exquisite Passacaille.

"An aria for Poppea after the recitative in I:19, 'Fa' quanto vuoi', was cut before the first performance. Instead, the action proceeded directly into the following scene, leaving Poppea no time to question whether the devious Agrippina has told the truth about Ottone's betrayal before having to fend off the advances of Claudio. The little animated continuo aria (with closing ritornello for four-part strings) has often been restored to its envisaged context in modern productions and recordings; listeners can choose for themselves whether to reinstate it.

"The sincere love duet 'No, no, ch'io non apprezzo' for Poppea and Ottone originally ended II:10, a moment of calm and tenderness following the farcical storm of comings and goings in Poppea's bedroom. Handel adapted the duet from the Roman cantata 'Il duello amoroso' (August 1708), in which the frustrated Daliso and disinterested Amarilli express bitter cynicism about love. Almost identical musical material would have represented the exact opposite sentiment for Ottone and Poppea in Agrippina, but Handel discarded the duet and instead prepared two increasingly different and longer schemes for the scene before he or his singers were satisfied. If listeners want to reconstruct Handel's concise first plan for II:10, culminating in the two lovers joining blissfully together, their duet can replace Ottone's declaration of love in his exit aria 'Pur ch'io ti stringa al sen' (also adapted from 'Il duello amoroso') and Poppea's giddy expression of joy (the recitative 'Piega pur del mio cor' and aria 'Bel piacere'), before proceeding to Nerone complaining to his mother in III:I I. (David Vickers. From the liner notes.)

Performers: Il Pomo d'Oro, Maxim Emelyanychev, Joyce DiDonato, Franco Fagioli, Elsa Benoit, Luca Pisaroni, Jakub Józef Orliński, Andrea Mastroni, Carlo Vistoli, Biagio Pizzuti, Marie-Nicole Lemieux

1.1. Sinfonia
1.2. Atto I, Scena I: 'Nerone, Amato Figlio'
1.3. Atto I, Scena I: 'Col Saggio Tuo Consiglio'
1.4. Atto I, Scena II: 'Per Cosi Grand'impresa'
1.5. Atto I, Scena III: 'A' Cenni Tuoi Sovrani'
1.6. Atto I, Scena III: 'La Mia Sorte Fortunata'
1.7. Atto I, Scena IV: 'Or Che Pallante È Vinto'
1.8. Atto I, Scena V: 'Umile Alle Tue Piante'
1.9. Atto I, Scena V: 'Volo Pronto'
1.10. Atto I, Scena VI: 'Quanto Fa, Quanto Puote'
1.11. Atto I, Scena VI: 'L'alma Mia Fra Le Tempeste'
1.12. Atto I, Scena VII: 'Qual Piacer'
1.13. Atto I, Scena VII: 'Amici, Al Sen Vi Stringo'
1.14. Atto I, Scena VIII: 'Ecco Chi Presto'
1.15. Atto I, Scena IX: 'Voi, Che Dell'alta Roma'
1.16. Atto I, Scena IX: 'Il Tuo Figlio'/'La Tua Prole'
1.17. Atto I, Scena IX: 'Ma Qual Di Liete Trombe'
1.18. Atto I, Scena X: 'Allegrezza, Allegrezza!'
1.19. Atto I, Scena X: 'Che Sento!'
1.20. Atto I, Scena XI: 'Alle Tue Piante, O Augusta'
1.21. Atto I, Scena XII: 'Augusta, Amo Poppea'
1.22. Atto I, Scena XII: 'Tu Ben Degno'
1.23. Atto I, Scena XIII: 'L'ultima Del Gioir'
1.24. Atto I, Scena XIII: 'Lusinghiera Mia Speranza'
1.25. Atto I, Scena XIV: 'Vaghe Perle'
1.26. Atto I, Scena XIV: 'Otton, Claudio, Nerone'
1.27. Atto I, Scena XV: 'Signora, O Mia Signora!'
1.28. Atto I, Scena XVI: 'Di Lieta Nuova'
1.29. Atto I, Scena XVII: 'Perché Invece Di Claudio'
1.30. Atto I, Scena XVII: 'È Un Foco Quel D'amore'
1.31. Atto I, Scena XVIII: '(Ma Qui Agrippina Viene)'
1.32. Atto I, Scena XVIII: 'Ho Un Non So Che Nel Cor'
1.33. Atto I, Scena XIX: 'Cieli, Quai Strani Casi'
1.34. Atto I, Scena XX: 'Non Veggo Alcun'
1.35. Atto I, Scena XXI: 'Pur Ritorno A Rimirarvi'
1.36. Atto I, Scena XXI: 'Ma, O Ciel, Mesta E Confusa'
1.37. Atto I, Scena XXI: 'Vieni, O Cara'
1.38. Atto I, Scena XXI: '(Che Mai Farò?)'
1.39. Atto I, Scena XXII: 'Signor, Signor, Presto'
1.40. Atto I, Scena XXII: 'E Quando Mai / Quando Vorrai'
1.41. Atto I, Scena XXII: 'Pur Al Fin Se N'andò'

2.1. Atto I, Scena XXIII: 'O Mia Liberatrice'
2.2. Atto I, Scena XXIII: 'Non Ho Cor Che Per Amarti'
2.3. Atto I, Scena XXIV: 'Se Ottone M'ingannò'
2.4. Atto I, Scena XXIV: 'Se Giunge Un Dispetto'
2.5. Atto II, Scena I: 'Dunque Noi Siam Traditi'
2.6. Atto II, Scena II: 'Coronato Il Crin D'alloro'
2.7. Atto II, Scena II: 'Roma, Più Ch'il Trionfo'
2.8. Atto II, Scena III: Preludio
2.9. Atto II, Scena III: 'Ecco Il Superbo'
2.10. Atto II, Scena III: 'Di Timpani E Trombe'
2.11. Atto II, Scena IV: 'Nella Britannia Vinta'
2.12. Atto II, Scena IV: 'Cade Il Mondo'
2.13. Atto II, Scena IV: 'Signor, Quanto Il Mio Cuore'
2.14. Atto II, Scena IV: 'Nulla Sperar Da Me'
2.15. Atto II, Scena IV: 'E Tu Poppea'
2.16. Atto II, Scena IV: 'Tuo Ben È Il Trono'
2.17. Atto II, Scena IV: 'Soccorri Almen Nerone'
2.18. Atto II, Scena IV: 'Sotto Il Lauro'
2.19. Atto II, Scena IV: 'Scherzo Son'
2.20. Atto II, Scena V: 'Otton, Otton'
2.21. Atto II, Scena V: 'Voi Ch'udite'
2.22. Atto II, Scena VI: 'Spera, Alma Mia'
2.23. Atto II, Scena VI: 'Il Tormento D'Ottone'
2.24. Atto II, Scena VII: '(Par Che Amor Sia)'
2.25. Atto II, Scena VII: 'Vaghe Fonti'
2.26. Atto II, Scena VII: 'Ma Qui Che Veggo'
2.27. Atto II, Scena VII: 'Fantasme Della Mente'
2.28. Atto II, Scena VII: 'Ti Vuo' Giusta'
2.29. Atto II, Scena VIII: 'Da Quali Ordite Trame'
2.30. Atto II, Scena VIII: 'Ingannata Una Sol Volta'
2.31. Atto II, Scena IX: 'Pur Alfin Ti Ritrovo'
2.32. Atto II, Scena X: 'A Non Pochi Perigli'
2.33. Atto II, Scena XI: 'Son Qui, Mia Vita'
2.34. Atto II, Scena XI: 'Col Peso Del Tuo Amor'
2.35. Atto II, Scena XII: 'Qual Bramato Piacere'
2.36. Atto II, Scena XII: 'Quando Invita'
2.37. Atto II, Scena XIII: 'Pensieri, Voi Mi Tormentate'/'Quel Ch'oprai'
2.38. Atto II, Scena XIV: 'Se Ben Nemica Sorte'
2.39. Atto II, Scena XIV: 'Col Raggio Placido'
2.40. Atto II, Scena XV: 'Di Giunger Non Dispero'
2.41. Atto II, Scena XVI: 'Or È Tempo'
2.42. Atto II, Scena XVI: 'Spererò, Poiché Mel Dice'

3.1. Atto II, Scena XVII: 'Per Dar La Pace Al Core'
3.2. Atto II, Scena XVIII: 'A Vagheggiar Io Vengo'
3.3. Atto II, Scena XIX: 'Signor, Poppea'
3.4. Atto II, Scena XIX: 'Basta Che Sol Tu Chieda'
3.5. Atto II, Scena XX: 'Favorevol La Sorte'
3.6. Atto II, Scena XX: 'Ogni Vento'
3.7. Atto III, Scena I: 'Il Caro Otton'
3.8. Atto III, Scena II: 'Ah, Mia Poppea'
3.9. Atto III, Scena II: 'Tacerò'
3.10. Atto III, Scena III: 'Attendo Qui Nerone'
3.11. Atto III, Scena IV: 'Anelante Ti Reco'
3.12. Atto III, Scena IV: 'Coll'ardor Del Tuo Bel Core'
3.13. Atto III, Scena V: 'Amico Ciel'
3.14. Atto III, Scena VI: 'Qui Non V'è Alcun'
3.15. Atto III, Scena VII: 'Temerario Insolente'
3.16. Atto III, Scena VIII: 'Ora, Claudio, Che Dici?'
3.17. Atto III, Scena VIII: 'Io Di Roma'
3.18. Atto III, Scena IX: 'Pur Alfin Se N'andò'
3.19. Atto III, Scena X: 'Ora Ottone, Che Dici?'
3.20. Atto III, Scena X: 'Pur Ch'io Ti Stringa Al Sen'
3.21. Atto III, Scena X: 'Piega Pur Del Mio Cor'
3.22. Atto III, Scena X: 'Bel Piacere'
3.23. Atto III, Scena XI: 'Cotanto Osò Poppea?'
3.24. Atto III, Scena XI: 'Come Nube'
3.25. Atto III, Scena XII: 'Evvi Donna Più Empia?'
3.26. Atto III, Scena XIII: 'Agrippina, Nerone'
3.27. Atto III, Scena XIV: 'Adorato Mio Sposo'
3.28. Atto III, Scena XIV: 'Se Vuoi Pace'
3.29. Atto III, Scena XV: 'Ecco La Mia Rivale'
3.30. Atto III, Scena XV: 'Lieto Il Tebro'
3.31. Atto III, Scena XVI: 'D'Ottone E Di Poppea'
3.32. Atto III, Scena XVI: 'V'accendano Le Tede'
3.33. Atto Terzo, Balli: Gigue
3.34. Atto Terzo, Balli: Sarabande
3.35. Atto Terzo, Balli: Bourrée
3.36. Atto Terzo, Balli: Menuet
3.37. Atto Terzo, Balli: Passacaille
3.38. Appendix. Atto I, Scena XIX: 'Fa' Quanto Vuoi'
3.39. Appendix. Atto III, Scena X: 'No, No, Ch'io Non Apprezzo'