Details
Breinton
Heath House Road
Brookwood
Woking
Surrey
GU22 0RD
England
Programme
George Frideric Handel – Clori, Tirsi e Fileno, HWV 96
Performers
Susanna Fairbairn – soprano
Caroline Taylor – soprano
Emma Stannard – mezzo-soprano
Julian Perkins – Conductor
Bampton Classical Opera
Programme Note
This autumn, Breinton is celebrating our 100th event and we are delighted to invite Bampton Classical Opera to a gala performance of Handel’s Clori, Tirsi e Fileno, one of his most extended and loveliest cantatas.
Also known by its opening words, Cor fedele, it is nothing less than a comic opera in miniature for just three characters. With luminous and sensuous orchestration and showing off the very best of Handel’s understanding of the voice, it is a gem of a work.
Julian Perkins, an acclaimed Handel specialist, conducts a period instrument ensemble and three exceptional young singers, Susanna Fairbairn, Caroline Taylor and Emma Stannard, the winner of the Bampton Classical Opera Young Singers’ Competition 2017.
The royal and aristocratic courts in the early 17th century appear to have enjoyed an insatiable and surprising need for music based on the amorous intrigues of Arcadian shepherds. When George Frideric Handel moved to Italy in 1706, he found himself writing semi-mythological and pastoral cantatas by the score, several of which centre on the loves, often unrequited, of the nymph or shepherdess Clori. In Rome Handel nurtured the most illustrious patronage and it was for the extravagant Marquess Francesco Ruspoli that he composed this cantata in 1707. Clori, lovely but fickle, strings along two adoring shepherds, Tirsi and Fileno. She really doesn’t know which way to turn! Promises are made, hearts are broken – until in the end the disillusioned youths decide that enough is enough.
Bampton Classical Opera, ‘Britain’s unchallenged champion of eighteenth-century opera’ (Opera Now) is delighted to be staging this masterpiece at three new venues, two of them al fresco and the third a restored traditional barn, all of them fitting for this engaging story of pastoral pleasure and pain.
