
Alexander's Feast at Kilkenny Arts Festival review: Perfect tale for Handel becomes perfect choice for Irish Baroque Orchestra
Irish Baroque Orchestra/Whelan
St Canice's Cathedral, Kilkenny
★★★★☆
This Kilkenny Arts Festival performance of Alexander's Feast takes place close to three centuries since its Irish premiere, in February 1742. That occasion was only a few weeks ahead of the world premiere of Messiah, in the same Dublin music hall on Fishamble Street, in April that year.
Both pieces were signals of career change for Handel. He composed Alexander's Feast in 1736, just as he was coming to accept that his gravy train of Italian operas for the London market would soon leave the station for the last time. His future success now lay with English-language texts, mostly biblical, and in composing oratorios rather than operas.
Alexander's Feast is actually neither. It's Handel's setting of a John Dryden poem for the feast of St Cecilia, patron of music. And music is its theme. For although the backdrop is ancient Persepolis, where Alexander the Great is celebrating his conquest of Persia, Dryden's real story is about how Alexander's bard Timotheus uses music to manipulate the king's emotions this way and that. Perfect for Handel – who retained Dryden's subtitle, The Power of Music – and perfect for the Irish Baroque Orchestra and its director, Peter Whelan, a conductor of manifest artistic appetite and energy.
As we've come to expect with Whelan, these qualities are immediately to the fore with his unleashing of the work's overture, itself full of energy and promise. His players run with every expression he communicates, so important in music with such sharp emotional contrasts from one movement to the next, all of it edged with the characteristic colours and zest of original instruments.
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The choruses – often the reflections of bystanders, as it were, on the different emotional states into which Timotheus leads Alexander – are sung not by a choir but by four singers, one to a part. Only once or twice does it feel as if the absence of a full choir means something is missing – unless that's just my having attended 4,000 Messiahs.
Otherwise the four singers are excellent, communicating not only clear words and the relevant states of mind but also wide dynamic range and easy navigation of Handel's intricate counterpoint.
In short, they are as effective as they are impressive, so it's quite unfortunate that their names – Elspeth Piggott, Sarah Thursfield, Christopher Bowen and William Gaunt – do not appear in the printed programme. (It is also either oversight or poor judgment, with a work of this kind, not to provide the audience with copies of the text.)
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'It's really a coup': Irish Baroque Orchestra to make BBC Proms debut with Handel 'Dublin' oratorio not performed since 18th century
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The three soloists are well matched in colour and tone quality, as though cut from the same cloth, but with each one's individual touch on show in how they present each new mood. The soprano Aisling Kenny, for example, brightly inhabits pride and excitement as Timotheus persuades Alexander that he belongs on Olympus among the gods, while the tenor Stuart Jackson is equally at home celebrating Bacchus and drink or urging vengeance and war. The countertenor Hugh Cutting beautifully validates Handel's entrusting his part with the work's tenderest and most searching moments.
Irish Baroque Orchestra
perform Alexander's Feast at the Royal Albert Hall in London, as part of
BBC Proms
, on Saturday, August 30th
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Irish Examiner
12 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
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Irish Times
12 minutes ago
- Irish Times
Mel Gibson: ‘I've still got the Irish passport... I think I understand the quirky nature of the Irish mind'
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A few years later he was doing Waiting for Godot opposite Geoffrey Rush. In 1979, when he shot the first Mad Max for George Miller, did either man have any idea it would ultimately lead to huge Hollywood careers? Mel Gibson on the set of Mad Max, written and directed by Australian George Miller. Photograph: Sunset Boulevard/Corbis/Getty 'No, no idea at all,' he says, laughing. 'It ended up in Hollywood. There's a Tom Waits song called Big in Japan. Remember that? 'I'm big in Japan!' Ha ha! The first Mad Max film was huge in Japan. It was just giant.' When I saw it in Ireland, they had replaced Gibson's then strongly Australian voice with that of an American actor. 'Yeah, we had some Montana cowboy doing my voice,' he says. 'Dubbing is always funny. Later on they re-released it with our own voices. I think I liked it better with the dub. Ha ha! No, no one saw that coming. George was a doctor. His ambulance driver was the guy who was, like, 'I could produce this!' They got a few friends together who owned pharmacies and cobbled together about $300,000. It did some business. Then it got serious with the second one.' The industry is now awash with Australian actors: Russell Crowe, Margot Robbie, Cate Blanchett – and on and on. That was not so then. Mind you, as we've established, Gibson is from a lot of places. He's Irish. He's American. He's Australian. Does he have trouble identifying his nationality? 'Yeah, I do,' he says. 'I think it's just an imprint that we have from generations back. It's imprinted on you. And you don't know where it's from. It's that feeling like you've been here before. But I don't think that's what it is. I think we are the sum of everything that made us.' At any rate, Braveheart confirmed Gibson as both an actor and director of note. The clattering epic was a surprise best-picture winner at the Oscars. 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The Passion of the Christ: director Mel Gibson speaks to Jim Caviezel on the set of his 2004 film. Photograph: Philippe Antonello/Icon Distribution 'A lot of people wanted to be involved,' Gibson says. 'But they would come to the table and then get cold feet. It was a much bigger production. I financed the first one myself. No one else would. And then I couldn't even get a major distributor. I got a little distribution company. They'd done a couple of things before. They had a toothless dog, a fax machine and a phone.' We know The Resurrection of the Christ is in two parts. We know Lionsgate is distributing. Part One arrives on March 26th, 2027 – that's Good Friday. Part Two will be with us May 6th, 2027. (Full marks if you worked out that that is Ascension Day.) But we don't know what the film is truly about. Jesus's experiences in the days after the resurrection have not been much examined in popular culture. 'I don't think it contradicts any of the Gospels,' Gibson says. 'But it does juxtapose some of the stories. It's not linear. And it's more than one film. It talks about things that aren't really spoken about in the Gospels. What bed was Peter hiding under? What was Matthew thinking? What was John doing? I tried to explore that.' The first film's success was, rightly or wrongly, attributed to Christians voting with their wallets. Does Gibson expect the new films to register beyond faith audiences? 'That's what I'm trying to do,' he says. 'What I want to do is just show them something they'll maybe ask a bunch of questions about. Because there are things in it that are pretty, pretty out there .' The world can consider itself warned.


Irish Independent
13 minutes ago
- Irish Independent
‘I'm part of the community as much as the postman or the milkman' – Ireland's ice-cream vans as beloved as ever despite changing tastes
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