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| Handel: Saul - Christopher Purves, Arcangelo (Photo: Craig Fuller) |
Handel: Saul; Christopher Purves, Hugh Cutting, Jessica Cale, Emőke Baráth, Linard Vrielink, Liam Bonthrone, Arcangelo, Jonathan Cohen; London Handel Festival at Smith Square Hall
Reviewed 18 Feburary 2025
One of those performances of Saul where we could let our imagination run riot with a cast who brought out the rich drama of the work alongside the very vibrant, present and intent account the music from Arcangelo
The 2026 London Handel Festival opened on Wednesday 18 February 2026 with a performance of one of Handel's grandest oratorios, Saul. The work was performed by the festival's principal ensemble in residence, Arcangelo, conducted by Jonathan Cohen, the ensemble's founder and the Festival's principal artistic advisor. And the event coincided with the announcement that Arcangelo and Cohen's relationship with the Festival will continue until 'at least' 2029.
The concert took place not at St George's Hanover Square, a favourite venue with the Festival, but at Smith Square Hall which meant that Cohen and Arcangelo could present Saul in all its sonic and dramatic splendour fielding a choir of 30 singers and orchestra with twenty strings plus of course flutes, recorders, oboes, bassoons, trombones, timpani and continuo. The cast had distinct links to Glyndebourne Opera's 2025 revival of Barrie Kosky's 2015 production: Christopher Purves as Saul, Linard Vrielink as Jonathan and Liam Bonthrone as the High Priest were all in the Glyndebourne performances which were conducted by Jonathan Cohen. At Smith Square, they were joined by Hugh Cutting as David, Jessica Cale as Michal, and Emőke Baráth as Merab.
As Ruth Smith points out in her excellent article in the programme book, Handel's Saul was revolutionary in many ways. Only his fourth English oratorio: the first three were Esther, Deborah and Athalia. Saul was also his first dramatic work with a bass lead, something Handel would return to four years later when he wrote Samson with tenor John Beard (Jonathan in Saul) in the title, lead role.
Saul was the longest English music-theatre work to date and Handel used larger forces than any English music theatre work or Italian opera previously performed in England. In our modern age when bigger can seem to be the norm, it is salutary to remember that the sort of large choral/orchestral forces Handel gathered together for Saul were unusual, that people would have to refer back to the Coronation of 1727, when Handel's specially written anthems were performed by significantly large forces.
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| Handel: Saul - Jessica Cale, Emőke Baráth, Linard Vrielink, Christopher Purves, Arcangelo (Photo: Craig Fuller) |
Smith also points out that English oratorio was not acted and that much of the drama can be found in the music. Whilst it is tempting to stage works like Saul, the vision of a director can sometimes seem somewhat reductive and allowing the music space; giving our imaginations free rein is more productive. Not that this performance was lacking in physical drama. Linard Vrielink sang his role from memory whilst Christopher Purves rarely needed his score. Purves' Saul was a character hard to contain and Purves prowled the stage constantly and projected Saul's mental deterioration even when not singing.
The other singers reacted and expressed. There was a surprising physicality to Hugh Cutting and Linard Vrielink's portrayal of David and Jonathan's relationship. The version of the oratorio performed (which was slightly cut but admirably complete) included David's solo in the Lament which has a remarkable homo-erotic inference. This was oratorio as drama without the necessity of constantly refreshing the stage picture that a fully staged performance can require.