Well, it’s only taken nearly 300 years for Rameau’s third opera-ballet, extremely popular in its time, to receive its UK premiere. In a cheeringly European venture, the production was mounted by talented young French and British singers (from l’Académie de l’Opéra de Paris, Centre de musique baroque de Versailles and Royal College of Music), under Oxford Rameau scholar Jonathan Williams, with French director and choreographer Thomas Lebrun.

Hébé fleeing Mount Olympus escapes to the banks of the Seine to witness three lightly plotted entertainments centred on poetry, music and dance, all underlining Cupid’s ultimate triumph. These formalised divertissements are a world away from Handel’s cauldron of passions, inviting audiences simply to savour the rich succession of timbres on display: a truly sumptuous Sapho from Adriana Gonzalez; Pauline Texier’s gloriously flirty Eglé. Nor are the males short-changed, with Juan de Dios de Mateos as a swaggering Mercury, and seductive tenor Joel Williams, who with soprano Eleanor Penfold, depicting stream and shepherdess (don’t ask), provided an enchanting high point in the first act.