Handel: Acis and Galatea

No sooner have Acis and Galatea declared their love than the evil giant (read: sexual predator) Polyphemus tears their union asunder. After doggedly but unsuccessfully pursuing Galatea, a jilted Polyphemus retaliates by ingloriously crushing Acis under a rock. Finally, with great poise, Galatea exerts her power divine by immortalising her beloved Acis. This fantastic new Chandos recording of Handel’s pastoral opera Acis and Galatea features the remarkable soprano of Lucy Crowe as our anguished heroine, and, for its charming melodies and affecting choruses, reminds us why Handel remains the great master of baroque opera.

Not since Sophie Daneman has there been a lovelier and more earthly Galatea. So far, Crowe has spent much of her career specialising in baroque music, and only recently has she diversified into bel canto repertoire. The change is noteworthy – while she still possesses impressive agility, her voice has taken on a richer, deeper quality. Her Galatea, therefore, sounds womanly and wise – she is alternately attuned to both the excitement and disappointment of love, and tormented by grief. If Daneman’s Galatea was a fresh-faced portrait of a love-struck young nymph, then Lucy Crowe’s recording with the Early Opera Company is a portrait for a post-#MeToo world.


Alexandra Mathew is a classical music specialist at Readings Carlton.

Cover image for Handel: Acis and Galatea

Handel: Acis and Galatea

Lucy Crowe

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