 Continuing the Handel series from Le Concert 
d’Astrée and Emmanuelle Haïm is La resurrezione, composed during the 
young Handel’s period in Rome and first performed there in 1708. The 
work recounts the events of Easter and the solo singers portray Lucifer,
 Mary Magdalene, an Angel, St John the Evangelist, and St Mary Cleophas.
Continuing the Handel series from Le Concert 
d’Astrée and Emmanuelle Haïm is La resurrezione, composed during the 
young Handel’s period in Rome and first performed there in 1708. The 
work recounts the events of Easter and the solo singers portray Lucifer,
 Mary Magdalene, an Angel, St John the Evangelist, and St Mary Cleophas.
 
It calls upon a large orchestra, led and directed at the first 
performance by the master violinist Arcangelo Corelli. The role of Mary 
Magdalene, here performed by the lush-voiced young British soprano (and 
EMI Classics artist) Kate Royal, was sung at the first performance by 
the celebrated Margherita Durastanti, even though the Pope had forbidden
 female singers to perform in public.
In April 2009, Emmanuelle Haïm led a performance of La resurrezione at London’s Barbican Centre, 
part of a tour which also covered Paris, Dijon, Aix-en-Provence, Lille, 
Pamplona, Valladolid and Salzburg. The Guardian reported that: 
“Emmanuelle Haïm's understanding of the relationship between sense and 
sensuality in Handel has marked her out as one of his finest 
interpreters, and her performance with her own Concert d'Astrée was 
notable for its immediacy and expression. The playing had touches of 
magic as recorders and flutes comforted the uncomprehending saints, and 
flaring brass heralded the arrival of a new dawn … Camilla Tilling's 
joyous Angel let fly volleys of flamboyant coloratura … while the great 
Sonia Prina was vocally spectacular and immensely moving as Mary 
Cleophas.”
The Salzburg performance led the Salzburger Nachrichten
 to describe the “springy mastery” of the ensemble, “with sparkling 
accents from the trumpets, lute and gamba … A Baroque highpoint in an 
Easter Festival dominated by Romanticism.” Drehpunkt Kultur described 
Luca Pisaroni’s Lucifer as “dangerously honed” and Toby Spence as “a 
master of subtle ornamentation”. Overall, the ensemble of singers was 
“technically and stylistically at the peak of today’s Handel 
interpretation”, while Haïm herself “knows how to ignite her ensemble to
 such powerful effect and then to restrain the emotion once more, so 
that the force of expression never runs wild.”
 
 
 
 
 
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