Austrian
                      contralto Lydia Vierlinger was new to me but on the showing
                      of this disc of Handel arias she is certainly a name to watch.
                      Not that choosing to sing Handel is an easy option. The arias
                      from his English oratorios might be well known and, given
                      the right sort of voice and technique, will show off a singer
                      well, but they contain many traps for the unwary.
                  
                  
                  
                  Vierlinger falls into
                      few of these traps and throughout the disc displays a warm,
                      contralto voice, one that seems to be entirely at home in
                      the lowish tessitura of these pieces. She does not have the
                      really dark sort of voice, as possessed by someone like Nathalie
                      Stutzman, instead Vierlinger has a lovely instrument which
                      is even-toned across the whole range.
                  
                   
                  
                  Her technique is such that she preserves the vocal line
                      admirably whilst still being rather expressive. There were
                      moments when I would have wished for a little more temperament.
                      But given the fine musicality of such arias as He was
                      despised from Messiah, this seems a little churlish.
                      Characterisation is a little generalised, but this is often
                      a problem on recital records. I will have to reserve final
                      judgement until I have heard her in a complete recording
                      of a dramatic work.
                  
                   
                  
                  Vierlinger studied in the USA and in London as well
                      as in her native Austria. Since 2004 she has taught at
                      the University of Music and Performing Arts in Vienna.
                      Her background
                      includes a great deal of choral experience, so she knows
                      this sort of oratorio repertoire from the inside out. Her
                      experience extends, though, through to romantic music and
                      even contemporary pieces. Her previous discs have included
                      a recital of Brahms duets with the soprano Doerthe Maria
                      Sandman and the world premiere recording of Telemann’s Pastorelle
                      en Musique.
                  
                   
                  
                  The programme here consists of groups of arias from La
                        Resurrezione, Samson and Messiah, punctuated
                        by the overtures to Hercules and Messiah.
                        I’m not sure why it was decided to concentrate on just
                        three works, but Vierlinger and her conductor, Jörg Zwicker,
                        have produced a sequence which is far more balanced than
                        it at first looks. The arias have been carefully chosen
                        to vary in mood and character though, as I have said, I
                        could have wished that Vierlinger emphasised these variations
                        a little more. It says much for Vierlinger’s performances
                        that there were occasions when I wished that the performers
                        had continued with the work in question rather than jumping
                        to the next excerpt - this was particularly true of the Messiah excerpts.
                  
                   
                  
                        Da Capo repeats are discreetly ornamented, though Vierlinger never goes over
                      the top. In a world where it is becoming common for ornamentation
                      to be over-done, this is very welcome, though some people
                      might wish that her ornaments were a little more elaborate.
                  
                   
                  
                  Zwicker and the Capella Leopoldina are an admirable
                      support to Vierlinger, producing wonderfully lively, crisp
                      accompaniments that positively dance along in the more up-tempo
                      numbers. It says much for their expressiveness that the two
                      overtures were a delight in their own right rather being
                      tedious interludes to be endured. The Wiener Motettenchor
                      give fine choral support where required, so much so that
                      I thought it a shame that they did no warrant a choral movement
                      of their own.
                  
                   
                  
                  But before I finish, I must mention one trap into which
                      Vierlinger does fall, that of language. Her accounts of the
                      Italian arias from La Resurrezione are entirely
                      admirable but things are less secure when it comes to the
                      English arias.
                      Quite frankly Vierlinger’s English just is not good enough;
                      this might not bother some people but it does me. No matter
                      how musical the singer, I just cannot imagine listening repeatedly
                      to these accounts of Handel’s English arias sung in English
                      with a marked Austrian accent. I would have preferred them
                      recorded in German. This is a shame because there is so much
                      to enjoy in Vierlinger’s musical performances.
                  
                   
                  
                  I can recommend this disc for its musicality and feel
                      for Handel’s music, but must warn off those for whom good
                      English is a sine qua non of Handel performance.
                  
                       
                  
                      Robert Hugill