Welcome
Season Schedule
This Season's Soloists
Program
Notes
Reviews
Tickets
Auditions
Support the
CPC
CPC in the Press
Howard County Arts
Organizations
|
Columbia Pro Cantare
Program Notes
Handel's Messiah
Barbara A. Renton,
Ph.D.,
Domus Musicae Slavicae, Bainbridge, NY
Some
may think of George Frederic Handel as one of the first modern public
personalities. He was born in what is now part of Germany (Halle) in the
same year as Johann Sebastian Bach (1685) and died in 1759 as a naturalized
English citizen. His entire life was lived during the period of the
settlement of the American colonies and before the American Revolution. He
was not only an inventive and ingenious composer, but also an able capitalist
who understood how to use social systems and economic systems, patronage and the
market-place, popular impressions and wealthy support, to enable public
performances of his works -- not once, but many times over.
His early professional life and emigration from Germany
to England could form the basis of a romantic novel, and, as luck would have it,
he wound up on the right side of the English Channel just at the point when his
erstwhile patron, King George I of Hanover (Germany), succeeded to the British
royal throne. In England Handel continued to write and produce operas, but
with varying success, despite his renown in other types of music and his
reputation for organ playing (which at that time meant a high degree of
improvisation). After the failure of his operas (and those of many
others), in 1739 Handel began to exchange staged dramatic compositions (opera:
primarily on secular and mythical themes) for unstaged dramatic ones (oratorio:
primarily on biblical themes). Here he struck gold with the public.
In 1742, Handel's reputation as a composer of church music led to an invitation
on behalf of three Dublin charity organizations to compose an oratorio, to be
performed exclusively for charitable purposes: "For the relief of the Prisoners
in several Gaols, and for the support of Mercer's Hospital in Stephen Street,
and of the Charitable Infirmary on the Inn's Quay." The resulting work,
Messiah, proved to be not only a unique work for Handel, but the most
magnificent triumph of his life. Evidence shows that not only did Handel
not accept a fee, he persuaded the soloists – of high quality and reputation –
to forego payment also. Charles Burney, the celebrated English musician
and music historian, noted that Messiah continued to be a work that "fed
the hungry, clothed the naked, fostered the orphan," so great were the power of
its reputation and the number of charity performances.
Messiah was unlike any of Handel's works, because
Dublin was unlike any other city in its cultivation of music and numerous
charity performances. The text, by Charles Jennens, is unusual in that it
is drawn entirely from the Hebrew scriptures (Old Testament) and the Christian
revelation (new Testament). The subtle sequence is that of Promise,
Incarnation, Passion, and Resurrection, giving an epic quality that replaces a
dramatic plot. It is not a reenactment, but a lyric contemplation of the
idea of Christian redemption (in the Christian church year: Advent, Christmas
and Easter). The many choruses, particularly the stately ones, relate the
work more closely to the English anthem than to the German or Italian oratorio.
There is little doubt that it is the choruses that have contributed largely to
this work's popularity. So artful was Handel's craft in the sequence of
pieces and their artistic balance and contrast, that at the first notes of
Hallelujah the first London audience was literally lifted to its feet by a
swell of emotion – a custom that has persisted to this day – but less by custom
than by a similar swell of enthusiasm. "I just can't help it," many
persons have said, "I know it's not logical, but I feel I just can't sit there;
I have to do something."
The original chorus was a small number of singers from the
two Dublin cathedrals. The Dean of St. Patrick's Cathedral, Jonathan Swift
(of Gulliver's Travels, and other well-known pieces of literature, who
was known for his dislike of music), had to be persuaded to grant permission for
the use of the Cathedral's singers "to assist at a club of fiddlers in Fishamble
Street..." as he put it. The alto arias were composed for Mrs. Susanna
Cibber, a stage tragedienne who played opposite the great David Garrick on the
London stage. Male soloists were drawn from local choirs. The
orchestra of the Dublin State Band was modest in size, not grandiose as we
sometimes, think, and was directed by Handel from the harpsichord.
Rich in invention and craft, amazing in musical inspiration
and illuminated by an unending number of details that delight the ear, the mind,
the heart, Messiah continues to claim a central place in the public's affection.
On
April 6, 1759, eight days before his death, afflicted by blindness, Handel
accompanied a performance of Messiah on the organ. He was buried with the
honors of state in Westminster Abbey. The performances continue...
|