Rachel Baptist: Ireland’s Black Syren
Rachel Baptist was a Black singer living in mid-18th-century Dublin, and likely born there, too. Known as the “Celebrated Black Syren,” Baptist performed mostly in the Marlborough Green pleasure garden in Dublin, singing popular theater songs, folk music, and arias from various contemporaneous oratorios and cantatas. The program brings together music by Handel, Geminiani, and Pasquali, all of whom had strong associations with Dublin, as well as Purcell, whose music was also popular there. It’s a fantastic showcase for soprano Rachel Redmond, who here assumes the role of Baptist. Her clear and characterful voice, ideally suited to this repertoire, is alive to the music’s emotional and often considerable technical demands, and shines, in particular, in the gentle “Softly Sweet in Lydian Measures” from Handel’s *Alexander’s Feast*. Equally sprightly is the Irish Baroque Orchestra under Peter Whelan, whose attention to phrasing, articulation, and clarity of texture makes this album an arresting and engaging listen.