Handel: Samson

Handel: Samson

composed by George Frideric Handel, 1685-1759; conducted by Harry Christophers, 1953-; produced by Mark Brown, 1962-; performed by Thomas Randle, Mark Padmore, Linda Russell, fl. 1985, Lynne Dawson, Catherine Wyn-Rogers, 1958- and Matthew Vine, The Sixteen and Symphony of Harmony and Invention (Coro), 4 hours 2 mins

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Details

Field of Interest
Classical Music
Composer
George Frideric Handel, 1685-1759
Conductor
Harry Christophers, 1953-
Content Type
Music recording
Duration
4 hours 2 mins
Recording Engineer
Mike Hatch
Ensemble
The Sixteen, Symphony of Harmony and Invention
Format
Audio
Sub Genre
Overture, Oratorio, Recitative, Chorus, Aria, Requiem, Duet, Symphony, March
Label
Coro
Performer
Thomas Randle, Mark Padmore, Linda Russell, fl. 1985, Lynne Dawson, Catherine Wyn-Rogers, 1958-, Matthew Vine
Producer
Mark Brown, 1962-
Date Recorded
2002
Review
Handel's oratorios don't get any better than Samson. Composed directly after Messiah, Samson is a tragedy of Biblical proportions with standout roles for the soloists, wonderfully effective parts for the chorus, and brilliant scoring for the orchestra. In its day, Samson was one of Handel's most popular works, and it remained so up through the early years of the twentieth century when Samson, like nearly all Handel's other oratorios, was eclipsed by the overwhelming popularity of Messiah and the singlemindedness of the listening public.

There have been few great recordings of Samson over the past 50 years, and they don't get any greater than this 1996 recording by Harry Christophers leading The Sixteen. All of the soloists are outstanding, from muscular tenor Thomas Randle as the blind Hebrew warrior through seductive soprano Lynda Russell as the debauched Philistine harlot. The chorus is equally effective in everything from the festive Philistines of the opening scene through the elegiac Hebrews of the closing scene. Christophers himself is a brilliant conductor, bringing out the best in the soloists and chorus, along with the marvelously named Symphony of Harmony & Invention, which especially distinguishes itself in the Dead March after Samson's suicide. Coro's 2005 reissue of the Collin's digital original is warm, open, and richly detailed. ~ James Leonard, All Music Guide
Subject
Classical Music, Music & Performing Arts, Baroque, Barroco
Keywords and Translated Subjects
Barroco

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