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Handel: The Musick For The Royal Fireworks

This is a reissue of a performance originally released on Deutsche Harmonia Mundi in Europe, one of the labelās final offerings before it was dissolved in 2008, and an import rarity that found little distribution in what was left of record retail in the US at the time. It was a shame because the recording features truly great performances in glorious, audiophile-quality sound of some of Handelās most important and beloved orchestral works. Thankfully, Arcana has chosen to make it available once again.
For years my two longstanding reference recordings of thisāthe later, grander 1749 revision of the Royal Fireworks Musicāwere performances by Jordi Savall directing Le Concert des Nations (AstrĆ©e, now AliaVox) and Trevor Pinnock with the English Concert (DG Archiv), and I enjoyed both for different reasons. Much had to do with the tempo choices. Savallās broader, more gracious approachāa 23-minute performanceāprovided a nice contrast to Pinnockās more uptempo, often thrilling 18-minute run. At 21-plus minutes Zefiroās performance strikes me as a ājust rightā middle course.
In my reference recordings I also appreciated how the relatively more spacious sound engineering of Savallās recording complemented his performance, and how in a similar way the thinner, somewhat more detailed acoustic afforded to Pinnock complemented his. The DHM engineers astonishingly provide Zefiro with the best of both approaches in creating the illusion of a rich array of life-like instrumentation set in a convincingly wide, open-air soundstage. Savall enters the work without fanfare while Pinnock begins with a brief, celebratory drum roll. Zefiro ups Pinnockās ante, opening the festivities with an opulent, elongated percussive roll, joined at the last moment by harpsichord and strings, in effect heightening the grandeur of the following, spectacular overture by the full orchestra. Perfect!
Zefiroās performances of the three Concerti a due cori compare very favorably with Christopher Hogwood and the Academy of Ancient Musicās reference versions (LāOiseau-Lyre, now Decca). Timings, the way the movements are shaped, and the dynamics are nearly identical, though again, Zefiro benefits from noticeably superior sound. The definition of the strings, and especially the brass, far surpasses what was possible with digital recording more than 30 years ago.
Mary Pardoeās engaging notes, loaded with fascinating quotes and anecdotes, thankfully have been retained for this reissue. Arcanaās packaging and presentation, as usual, are second to none. Donāt miss this!
-- John Greene, ClassicsToday.com
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Handel: The Musick For The Royal Fireworks
Handel: The Musick For The Royal Fireworks

This is a reissue of a performance originally released on Deutsche Harmonia Mundi in Europe, one of the labelās final offerings before it was dissolved in 2008, and an import rarity that found little distribution in what was left of record retail in the US at the time. It was a shame because the recording features truly great performances in glorious, audiophile-quality sound of some of Handelās most important and beloved orchestral works. Thankfully, Arcana has chosen to make it available once again.
For years my two longstanding reference recordings of thisāthe later, grander 1749 revision of the Royal Fireworks Musicāwere performances by Jordi Savall directing Le Concert des Nations (AstrĆ©e, now AliaVox) and Trevor Pinnock with the English Concert (DG Archiv), and I enjoyed both for different reasons. Much had to do with the tempo choices. Savallās broader, more gracious approachāa 23-minute performanceāprovided a nice contrast to Pinnockās more uptempo, often thrilling 18-minute run. At 21-plus minutes Zefiroās performance strikes me as a ājust rightā middle course.
In my reference recordings I also appreciated how the relatively more spacious sound engineering of Savallās recording complemented his performance, and how in a similar way the thinner, somewhat more detailed acoustic afforded to Pinnock complemented his. The DHM engineers astonishingly provide Zefiro with the best of both approaches in creating the illusion of a rich array of life-like instrumentation set in a convincingly wide, open-air soundstage. Savall enters the work without fanfare while Pinnock begins with a brief, celebratory drum roll. Zefiro ups Pinnockās ante, opening the festivities with an opulent, elongated percussive roll, joined at the last moment by harpsichord and strings, in effect heightening the grandeur of the following, spectacular overture by the full orchestra. Perfect!
Zefiroās performances of the three Concerti a due cori compare very favorably with Christopher Hogwood and the Academy of Ancient Musicās reference versions (LāOiseau-Lyre, now Decca). Timings, the way the movements are shaped, and the dynamics are nearly identical, though again, Zefiro benefits from noticeably superior sound. The definition of the strings, and especially the brass, far surpasses what was possible with digital recording more than 30 years ago.
Mary Pardoeās engaging notes, loaded with fascinating quotes and anecdotes, thankfully have been retained for this reissue. Arcanaās packaging and presentation, as usual, are second to none. Donāt miss this!
-- John Greene, ClassicsToday.com
$20.99
Handel: The Musick For The Royal Fireworksā
$20.99
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description

This is a reissue of a performance originally released on Deutsche Harmonia Mundi in Europe, one of the labelās final offerings before it was dissolved in 2008, and an import rarity that found little distribution in what was left of record retail in the US at the time. It was a shame because the recording features truly great performances in glorious, audiophile-quality sound of some of Handelās most important and beloved orchestral works. Thankfully, Arcana has chosen to make it available once again.
For years my two longstanding reference recordings of thisāthe later, grander 1749 revision of the Royal Fireworks Musicāwere performances by Jordi Savall directing Le Concert des Nations (AstrĆ©e, now AliaVox) and Trevor Pinnock with the English Concert (DG Archiv), and I enjoyed both for different reasons. Much had to do with the tempo choices. Savallās broader, more gracious approachāa 23-minute performanceāprovided a nice contrast to Pinnockās more uptempo, often thrilling 18-minute run. At 21-plus minutes Zefiroās performance strikes me as a ājust rightā middle course.
In my reference recordings I also appreciated how the relatively more spacious sound engineering of Savallās recording complemented his performance, and how in a similar way the thinner, somewhat more detailed acoustic afforded to Pinnock complemented his. The DHM engineers astonishingly provide Zefiro with the best of both approaches in creating the illusion of a rich array of life-like instrumentation set in a convincingly wide, open-air soundstage. Savall enters the work without fanfare while Pinnock begins with a brief, celebratory drum roll. Zefiro ups Pinnockās ante, opening the festivities with an opulent, elongated percussive roll, joined at the last moment by harpsichord and strings, in effect heightening the grandeur of the following, spectacular overture by the full orchestra. Perfect!
Zefiroās performances of the three Concerti a due cori compare very favorably with Christopher Hogwood and the Academy of Ancient Musicās reference versions (LāOiseau-Lyre, now Decca). Timings, the way the movements are shaped, and the dynamics are nearly identical, though again, Zefiro benefits from noticeably superior sound. The definition of the strings, and especially the brass, far surpasses what was possible with digital recording more than 30 years ago.
Mary Pardoeās engaging notes, loaded with fascinating quotes and anecdotes, thankfully have been retained for this reissue. Arcanaās packaging and presentation, as usual, are second to none. Donāt miss this!
-- John Greene, ClassicsToday.com