Given that Handel's Agrippina at the Barbican last night was billed as a “concert performance”, there was an awful lot of acting going on. There were music stands and the singers carried scores, but they barely glanced at them: Joyce DiDonato’s glasses served less as a reading aid than as an offensive weapon to be jabbed threateningly at Agrippina’s (many) enemies. All of which went to illustrate the heart of the matter: Vincenzo Grimani may have been one of the only opera librettists in history to hold a religious office as high as Cardinal, but that didn’t stop him having a wicked and decidedly secular sense of humour and the text of Agrippina sizzles with ironic wit.
The whole cast revels in it. Agrippina isn’t a comic opera as such – we’re talking about foul deeds and skullduggery at court – but the empress of the title is so barefaced in her deceitfulness that we cannot help but laugh, never more so than when she promises love and riches to her two courtiers Pallante and Narciso: singing precisely the same line of recitative to each in turn, but with the names changed.
There probably isn’t a more technically accomplished mezzo than DiDonato currently on the planet. The voice is so completely solid: she can move between near-whispered pianissimo to Met-Opera-House-filling thunder at any point in her range or while shifting rapidly through it, at slow-breathed legato or quick fire coloratura, never losing the flow of a phrase. It’s impressive to listen to, but more impressive still is seeing the freedom that such technical confidence gives her to enjoy the theatricality of the role and react to her fellow singers.
The other cast member who can turn on the coloratura fireworks was countertenor Franco Fagioli as Nerone. The experience is more mixed here: Fagioli thrilled with his execution of the high speed runs with power and precision of pitch and he entertained with his über-camp portrayal of Nerone as a spoilt mummy’s boy. But Fagioli can choose many different timbres and the principal one he chose for Nerone was quite hard-edged. It was exciting, it was impressive, it could be funny, but it wasn’t all that attractive to listen to.
Of the four men who are objects of Agrippina’s intrigues, none are destined to win prizes for street smarts. Her husband, the emperor Claudio, spends most of the evening in a general state of befuddlement, but still finds room for the odd knockout bass aria: Luca Pisaroni gave us delicious warmth and cantabile line in “Vieni, o cara” and vigorous bluster in “Cade il mondo soggiogato”, although its initial low D was a stretch. The other bass, Andrea Mastroni, impressed as the courtier Pallante with a tightly focused and flexible voice, creating a good double act with Carlo Vistoli’s Narciso.