Agrippina was 
                Handel’s second opera written for Italy. In fact it was one of 
                the last works he wrote before leaving Italy. It opera was written 
                for the San Giovanni Crisostomo theatre in Venice for the 1709/10 
                carnival season. One of Handel’s first popular triumphs, it was 
                performed some 27 times. 
              
Handel did not write 
                  many operas in Italy, mainly because he spent much of his time 
                  in Rome where the theatres were closed. Instead he produced 
                  a spectacular series of chamber cantatas, often for the same 
                  singers that he would later encounter in opera houses. These 
                  formed a remarkable training ground on which he could hone his 
                  talent.
                
              
Agrippina was 
                the setting of a libretto by Cardinal Vincenzo Grimani, whose 
                family owned the theatre where the opera was premiered. The libretto 
                would seem to be one of the few which were specifically written 
                for Handel. Though it deals with historical characters, it treats 
                them very much in the manner of 17th century Venetian 
                opera with a mixture of comic and serious situations. 
              
This style of libretto 
                  would remain a life-long favourite of Handel’s. In London though, 
                  when turning to 17th century Venetian librettos - 
                  such as the one used for Serse - the libretto was subject 
                  to considerable change to align it closer to contemporary tastes 
                  in heroic opera.
                
              
But Agrippina 
                has fewer such adjustments; it is constructed of many short arias 
                mostly rather lightly scored. Few of its characters are admirable 
                and none is treated heroically. The music generally does not touch 
                the sublime grandeur that some of his later operas do. Instead 
                we get a quicksilver score which reacts to the characters’ changes 
                of mood and nefarious shenanigans. 
              
The title role was 
                  written for Margherita Durastantini, a soprano with whom Handel 
                  worked frequently, first in Italy and later in London. She sang 
                  in a number of Handel’s Italian cantatas as well as creating 
                  the part of Maria Magdalene in La Resurrezione in Rome 
                  earlier on in Handel’s Italian visit.
                
Durastantini was 
                  not a high soprano and the part of Agrippina is nowadays often 
                  sung by mezzo-sopranos, though this does mean that the work 
                  is slightly over-burdened with contralto/mezzo-soprano/counter-tenor 
                  type voices. On this disc, with Nerone sung by counter-tenor 
                  Derek Lee Ragin, we have three counter-tenors, one mezzo-soprano 
                  and one soprano.
                
Della Jones is a 
                  highly experienced Handel singer and her performance of the 
                  title role is a tour-de-force. There were odd moment when I 
                  would have liked a lighter, soprano tone but she brings a vocal 
                  warmth to the role which softens some of Agrippina’s less likeable 
                  traits. Jones dominates Acts 1 and 2 as Agrippina’s scheming 
                  articulates the plot. She is adept at both the lighter, shorter 
                  number as well as the more powerful ones which Handel allows 
                  her, such as Pensieri, voi mi tormentato her Act 2 aria 
                  sung when she thinks her schemes are coming unstuck.
                
As her son, Nerone, 
                  Derek Lee Ragin sings a part written for a soprano castrato. 
                  Nerone is still young in this opera and Handel uses the part’s 
                  high vocal range as part of the characterisation. Understandably, 
                  the role is generally sung on stage by women but Ragin displays 
                  a remarkably extension to the usual counter-tenor range. He 
                  is by turns thoughtful, sensitive and virtuoso, his changes 
                  of mood mirroring those of his mother. Ragin’s performance is 
                  remarkable. There are moments of understandable strain in the 
                  high-lying passages but he never compromises on the expressivity 
                  and characterisation. Rarely have I heard a high counter-tenor 
                  singing so well. The disadvantage is, of course, that the tone 
                  sounds rather more mature and less boyish than a lighter soprano 
                  but that is a small price to pay for fine artistry.
                
Nerone’s love interest, 
                  Poppea, is the first of what Winton Dean describes as Handel’s 
                  ‘sex kitten’ roles. She lives for the gratification of the senses. 
                  Handel would return to such a character with Cleopatra and with 
                  Semele. Donna Brown copes very well with the considerable virtuoso 
                  requirements of the role and creates an appealing character. 
                  But I could not help feeling that her voice is sometimes a little 
                  stressed at the top and her runs are a little heavy. Though 
                  Brown does not let that side down in what is a very strong cast, 
                  I have frankly heard better, lighter-voiced Poppeas.
                
Ottone, who is also 
                  in love with Poppea, is the only character in the opera who 
                  is not in some way despicable. Michael Chance brings to the 
                  role some of the most perfect singing on the set. He is on fine 
                  form in all his arias and certainly wins our sympathy and support. 
                  Ottone can come over as a bit of a drip, but when sung as well 
                  as this there is no chance of him losing our sympathy.
                
George Mosely and 
                  Jonathan Peter Kenny are Pallante and Narciso, two conspirators 
                  who Agrippina inveigles into her plotting. Handel nicely differentiates 
                  their characters - one a baritone, the other an alto. Mosely 
                  and Kenny respond well to their material and provide nicely 
                  characterised performances.
                
Alastair Miles is 
                  Claudio, Agrippina’s husband the Emperor. Miles makes Claudio’s 
                  bluster and idiocy all the more amusing for taking it seriously.
                
Amongst the smaller 
                  roles, Anne Sofie von Otter crops up at the end as the Goddess 
                  Juno and Julian Clarkson contributes a neat turn as the servant 
                  Lesbo.
                
John Eliot Gardiner 
                  has not committed many Handel operas to disc, but his control 
                  of the work is impressive. He keeps the tempos flowing without 
                  seeming rushed. This is especially true of the recitative, of 
                  which there is a considerable amount. He is ably supported by 
                  the fine playing of the English Baroque Soloists.
                
My only real complaint 
                  is that the whole recording comes over as slightly serious. 
                  If you listened without any understanding of the plot, you might 
                  miss its satirical nature. This is more easily brought out in 
                  performance, when the stage picture can help focus how the audience 
                  perceives the music. But here on disc I would have liked a little 
                  more smile in the music.
                
That said, this 
                  is a superbly sung and performed account of one of Handel’s 
                  first masterpieces - a highly enjoyable recording that can be 
                  recommended to experienced Handel opera fans and newcomers alike. 
                
Robert Hugill