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            George Frideric HANDEL 
              (1685-1759)  
              Water Music (1717): Suite in F major, HWV348 
              [30:10]; Suite in G major, HWV350 [10:16]; Suite in D major, HWV349 
              [11:01]  
              Rodrigo, HWV5 (1707): Overture and dances [13:48] 
                
              Les Musiciens du Louvre, Grenoble/Marc Minkowski 
              rec. MC2, Grenoble, January 2010, DDD 
                NAÏVE V 5234 [68:00]   
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                  It’s an achievement when an artist can take a well-known 
                  work and interpret it freshly as if heard for the first time. 
                  This Marc Minkowski does with Handel’s Water Music 
                  by daring to challenge convention and expectation. Firstly Minkowski 
                  chooses to ignore modern musicology, which considers the work 
                  a continuous piece or a sequence of movements first in F major 
                  or D minor, then a mix of movements in D major and G major. 
                  Minkowski follows the earlier performance practice of presenting 
                  the Water Music as three suites, respectively grounded 
                  in F, G and D major which used to be called the Horn, Flute 
                  and Trumpet suites, designating the notable solo instruments. 
                  Minkowski also includes the two variant movements in F, HWV331, 
                  which are now thought to be a revision by Handel to create a 
                  freestanding concerto. If you’d like to hear them as such 
                  you need to programme your player to play just track 5 followed 
                  by track 12.  
                     
                  One problem with a well-known work like the Water Music 
                  is that musically it holds no surprises. You know exactly what’s 
                  going to happen. But I was surprised by the freshness of Marc 
                  Minkowski’s account. This is founded on superb playing 
                  but also partly because Minkowski isn’t afraid to take 
                  risks and do things differently. Even if this doesn’t 
                  always quite come off, the gamble is stimulating. You experience 
                  this right from the start of the Ouverture (tr. 1). Minkowski 
                  chooses to understate its introduction so the skipping main 
                  body (from 1:11) seems all the merrier. He’s like a spaniel 
                  hovering, well behaved at the garden gate before bounding in 
                  and running amok among the shrubbery. I’ll compare another 
                  recording on period instruments, made in 1996 by the London 
                  Classical Players/Roger Norrington (Virgin Classics 391334 2, 
                  review). 
                  Norrington’s Ouverture begins more assertively but in 
                  this he’s more formal while his main body is more studied, 
                  less free than Minkowski’s.  
                     
                  The joy of Minkowski’s second movement is the fine variety 
                  of decoration by the oboe soloist which makes the arioso personal 
                  and seductive, spaciously presented yet smoothly flowing. Norrington’s 
                  account is a truer Adagio, taking 2:19 against Minkowski’s 
                  1:59, but thereby seems more calculated in its beauteously reflective 
                  but sparer manner. In the third movement horns’ spotlight 
                  Minkowski takes us from the drawing room to the farmyard with 
                  exuberant, swaggering braying. Norrington is sonorous but deliberate: 
                  his clarity of articulation lacks Minkowski’s stimulating 
                  sweep. The followingAndante in D minor is given creamy 
                  and smooth treatment by Minkowski yet has a sure progression. 
                  Norrington is more sober, intimate and more consciously stylish 
                  before the da capo of the preceding horns’ spotlight. 
                  Minkowski omits this, substituting the expanded F major variant 
                  (tr. 5) of the Ouverture which opens the D major suite (tr. 
                  18) and while it’s good to have this, with horns and strings 
                  in splendid form, I felt a bit cheated of the da capo. 
                  That said, all I need to do is repeat track 3.  
                     
                  The next movement (tr. 6) is marked to be played three times. 
                  Minkowski adds to its attractiveness by varying the scoring: 
                  horns and strings first time, horns and oboes in the repeat, 
                  everyone third time. He then gives us a velvety central section 
                  for strings alone before the da capo. Norrington’s 
                  presentation is equally lively with a well contrasted silky 
                  central section but he only gives us the first section material 
                  twice and tutti throughout. The famous Air (tr. 7) is 
                  presented by Minkowski in relaxed, courtly and stylish fashion 
                  with scoring and structure intelligently varied. The first strain 
                  appears on strings alone, quite intimate, then with oboes doubling 
                  first violins in the repeat. Then he plays the first half of 
                  the second section with the horns’ counterpoint (0:46) 
                  without repeat before returning to the second half of the first 
                  section (1:10), strings only and then following the pattern 
                  as before. Norrington’s Air is more jocular and offhand. 
                  He’s more uniform in using tutti instruments throughout, 
                  one repeat for both halves of the movement plus a final outing 
                  for the first strain. Next, Minkowski’s Minuet (tr. 8) 
                  is bracing, pacy and emphasises the percussive element of the 
                  string-bass in the tutti scoring yet has a sleek contrasted 
                  F minor central section (0:44). Here Norrington is slower, grander, 
                  especially in the string body and with more emphasis in the 
                  central section on the second violins’ counter-tune.  
                     
                  In the Bourrée and Hornpipe Minkowski plays the first 
                  section thrice before proceeding to the second whereas Norrington 
                  plays both sections together which I prefer. But Minkowski’s 
                  swinging tempo is irresistible, beside which Norrington seems 
                  over sedate. The next piece, in D minor, has no tempo indication. 
                  Minkowski makes it spacious, smoothly reflective and relaxed 
                  at 4:29. Norrington, at 2:43, is more bubbly but thereby also 
                  flimsier. Minkowski finishes off his set of F major/D minor 
                  pieces with his second bonus, the F major version of the Alla 
                  Hornpipe (tr. 12) which is a slightly longer revision of the 
                  D major version (tr. 19). Here oboes alternate with horns and 
                  there’s an extra rising counter-theme first heard at 0:37 
                  and a glowing tailpiece for the horns at 1:10. Minkowski’s 
                  account is pacy yet also sunny and serene.  
                     
                  Minkowski now presents the G major/minor movements as a suite. 
                  The first (tr. 13) showcases a smooth flute, with repeats gracefully 
                  ornamented to create a continuously flowing expanded melodic 
                  line. Norrington’s flautist is fussier, the effect less 
                  restful. Minkowski retains the flute in a light and frothy Rigaudon 
                  where Norrington offers the usual oboe with a sunnier, more 
                  al fresco perspective. Minkowski, on the other hand, 
                  offers the pleasing change of timbre of recorder in the G minor 
                  movement between appearances of the Rigaudon. That recorder 
                  returns daintily in the movement between entries of a steady 
                  Minuet from Minkowski where Norrington is fuller in texture 
                  but less poised and individual in the recorder’s contribution. 
                  Minkowski’s recorder also sparkles a touch more as the 
                  C minor filling for two outings of a rustic G major dance with 
                  bassoons prominent. Norrington makes this dance the filler but 
                  it has more substance than its higher register companion.  
                     
                  Finally Minkowski gives us the D major suite, opening with the 
                  original version (tr. 18) of the Ouverture heard earlier, this 
                  time featuring spirited alternation between trumpets and horns, 
                  even if the harpsichord improvisation before its closing Adagio 
                  bars is rather long-winded. Norrington, with a briefer, more 
                  stylish violin improvisation, is otherwise more orderly but 
                  less exciting. Now comes the original version of the Alla Hornpipe 
                  (tr. 19), very bright and with jazzy ornamentation from the 
                  trumpets, into their stride by the cadence at 0:54 after which 
                  there’s no holding them and you begin to feel sorry for 
                  the horns who can’t always quite match them. In comparison 
                  Norrington seems rather stiff in manner and stingy in ornamentation. 
                  Minkowski continues with an effervescent third appearance of 
                  the second strain of the following Minuet and still more high-jinks 
                  in the third and fourth tutti appearances of a fast and 
                  frisky Bourrée, presented first by trumpets, with oboes 
                  and bassoons on the repeat, second by horns and oboes. This 
                  has never sounded more exuberant. Before this rip-roaring finale, 
                  however, Minkowski parades a Lentement that’s extravagantly 
                  slow and stately which gives it something of a halting quality. 
                  The effect is that of a grand, splendidly arrayed dignitary, 
                  hobbling in procession. Here I prefer the more lilting Norrington, 
                  taking 1:26 in comparison with Minkowski’s 2:34.  
                     
                  To complete the CD Minkowski has chosen the little known Overture 
                  and suite of dances which open Handel’s opera Rodrigo. 
                  Minkowski gives us an Overture (tr. 23) which is sunny, laid-back 
                  to a degree yet also with a spring in its step, florid and abounding 
                  in rhythmic variety. It sports an Allegro main section 
                  (1:09) that’s light and blithely skipping in which passages 
                  for violins and oboes blend and separate before a more formal 
                  but not too slow close. Minkowski conveys this all with great 
                  fluency and a feel for the echoing phrases which are deftly 
                  pointed. I compared Il Complesso Barocco/Alan Curtis (Virgin 
                  Classics 6958622) who only perform the Overture in their 1997 
                  recording of the complete opera. Curtis is more punctilious 
                  in rhythmic articulation but less varied, always performing 
                  even runs of quavers as if dotted quavers and semiquavers. His 
                  introduction is slower, 1:22 against Minkowski’s 1:09, 
                  but less flowing, his Allegro faster but thereby somewhat 
                  thrown off.  
                     
                  Now Minkowski gives us the dances too. Well, almost all of them 
                  if you consult the 2007 Barenreiter urtext which has a Menuet 
                  II that isn’t included here. The first dance is a Gigue, 
                  lively and happy with a brief, not at all serious excursion 
                  into G minor in its second section. A Sarabande follows, luxuriating 
                  in an easy grace of melody Handel would have noted in Purcell, 
                  garnished here with touches of lute and harpsichord and with 
                  Minkowski using solo instruments for the repeats of both sections 
                  to create an idyllic, intimate effect. After this Matelotte 
                  is a bubbly Sailors’ dance to set your feet tapping. Then 
                  there’s a Menuet (urtext Menuet I), light and neatly done 
                  before a genially leaping Bourrée (urtext Bourrée 
                  II) in which it’s the oboes and bassoon who have the repeats 
                  to themselves having doubled the strings first time. This is 
                  followed by a Gavotte, called Bourrée I in the urtext: 
                  whatever you call it, a frisky number of tremendous verve and 
                  vigorous percussive effects from strings and lute. The concluding 
                  Passacaglia has a smooth opening and also close. It’s 
                  a static, cosy vision of peace and plenty from which a solo 
                  violin escapes. This provides a focus of individual activity, 
                  aided and abetted by lots of nifty writing for the lower strings, 
                  the oboes and alternation between the soloist and the other 
                  violins. Minkowski’s band pursues all this with relish 
                  and the set of pieces makes a refreshing close to a disc of 
                  vividly realized and thoroughly entertaining performances.  
                   
                     
                  Michael Greenhalgh  
                     
                  Masterwork Index: Water 
                  Music 
                  
                  
                  
                 
             
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