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Boston Early Music Festival Orchestra, Paul O'Dette & Stephen Stubbs - Handel: Almira, HWV 1 (2020)

Boston Early Music Festival Orchestra, Paul O'Dette & Stephen Stubbs - Handel: Almira, HWV 1 (2020)
FLAC tracks +booklet | 04:01:59 | 1,2 Gb
Genre: Classical / Label: CPO

The Boston Early Music Festival has recorded George Frideric Handel’s very first opera, Almira, Queen of Castile, with a superlatively sumptuous ensemble. For its previous recordings of Baroque operas this successful ensemble has won prizes such as the Grammy, the German Record Critics Annual Prize, and the Echo Klassik. The Hungarian soprano Emõke Baráth sings the role of Almira with a choice ensemble of singers, all of whom have performed in the world’s most renowned concert halls and opera houses. Handel’s Almira is based on a freely invented plot featuring fine entertainment in the form of love and marriage schemes among the nobility, infidelity and mistaken identities, and a happy ending brought about by a court servant’s negotiations. This work was presented at the Hamburg Opera House in 1705 about twenty times and with great success.
Andrew Lawrence-King, Fiori Musicali - George Frideric Handel: Almira, Konigin von Castilien (1996)

Andrew Lawrence-King, Fiori Musicali - George Frideric Handel: Almira, Königin von Castilien (1996)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 1.04 Gb | Total time: 77:48+69:44+76:52 | Scans included
Classical | Label: CPO | # 999 275-2 | Recorded: 1994

Handel came to the city of Hamburg in the summer of 1703 and played as a violinist in the theatre at the Gänsemarkt, the local market place. On later occasions, he also played the harpsichord in the orchestra. His first opera – announced as a Singspiel although it has no spoken dialogue – was premiered on 8 January 1705, after being composed in the months directly preceding this. An Italian libretto was written by Giulio Pancieri in Venice in 1691 for Giuseppe Boniventi's opera L'Almira. The German translation used by Handel was made by Friedrich Christian Feustking. The recitatives of the opera are in German, while some of the arias are also in German, others in Italian, as was the custom at the opera house in Hamburg. Almira is the sole example among Handel's many operas with no role for a castrato.
Stephen Stubbs, Paul O’Dette, Boston Early Music Festival Orchestra - George Frideric Handel: Almira (2019)

Stephen Stubbs, Paul O’Dette, Boston Early Music Festival Orchestra - George Frideric Handel: Almira (2019)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 1.20 Gb | Total time: 241:55 | Scans included
Classical | Label: CPO | 555 205-2 | Recorded: 2018

The Boston Early Music Festival has recorded George Frideric Handel’s very first opera, Almira, Queen of Castile, with a superlatively sumptuous ensemble. For its previous recordings of Baroque operas this successful ensemble has won prizes such as the Grammy, the German Record Critics Annual Prize, and the Echo Klassik. The Hungarian soprano Emõke Baráth sings the role of Almira with a choice ensemble of singers, all of whom have performed in the world’s most renowned concert halls and opera houses. Handel’s Almira is based on a freely invented plot featuring fine entertainment in the form of love and marriage schemes among the nobility, infidelity and mistaken identities, and a happy ending brought about by a court servant’s negotiations. This work was presented at the Hamburg Opera House in 1705 about twenty times and with great success.