Nicholas Kenyon 

Handel/Mendelssohn: Israel in Agypten CD review – a fascinating reconstruction

Mendelssohn’s arrangement of Handel’s masterly oratorio gets a feisty makeover
  
  

Conductor Robert King
Conductor Robert King. Photograph: Keith Saunders

Mendelssohn famously revived Bach’s St Matthew Passion, but he was also fascinated by the music of Handel, having studied his music on a visit to London in 1829. In 1833 he revised, reorchestrated and semi-staged (with a series of tableaux vivants) Handel’s great Old Testament oratorio Israel in Egypt. It has now been reconstructed by Robert King, and the results are fascinating – burbling clarinets supply continuo, added solo recitatives fill out the sequence of choral movements, and a totally Mendelssohnian overture now kicks off the story. Handel’s masterly depictions of frogs, plagues and other natural disasters in his choruses are enhanced (though with German texts) in this feisty performance.

 

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