Arriving in Paris, where he meets his former student Marie-Antoinette, Gluck decides to revise one of his great Viennese successes for the French public: Orfeo ed Euridice. More than a simple adaptation to the French language and tastes, his Orphée et Eurydice establishes itself as a true aesthetic revolution. It is this breath of novelty that Paul Agnew, Les Arts Florissants, and their three exceptional performers help us rediscover here.