One of the greatest pieces of Christian music ever written, by anyone, at any time in history. If you haven't heard it, please take the time to check it out. Stunningly beautiful and exceptionally well-written, using scripture in every piece.
At twelve noon,
on this date, April 13,
1742, the world first heard the lovely overture, memorable arias
and majestic choruses of the most famous oratorio ever written. There
has not been a year since then that George Frederick Handel's
Messiah has not been performed in concert halls around the
world. Usually it appears in numerous halls.
The performance took place in Dublin, in the Fishamble Street Musick
Hall. Dubliners received it with enthusiasm. "...the best judges
allowed it to be the most finished piece of music," wrote the
Dublin Gazette. "Words are wanting to express the exquisite delight
it afforded..." Two performances were given. Two years later,
annual performances were established in Dublin. London did not receive
the oratorio as readily. Criticized, it did not catch on there until
1749.
Handel had turned to oratorios, most of them on religious themes,
after opera failed him.
Messiah was special even within its
genre. The composer deliberately wrote it so that it could be performed
by as few as four singers with strings, continuo, two drums and two
trumpets. The idea was to produce a work which could be staged anywhere.
Handel was often near destitution, and a piece like
Messiah, which
could be performed by small ensembles, offered him opportunities to
raise desperately needed cash.
The text, by Charles Jennens, pulled together fragments of scripture
relating to Christ. The power of the scriptures came by laying them
forth almost as translated (he used more than one translation where it
suited his purpose) and joining them so that they built on and clarified
one another without comment. Old and New Testament passages were placed
beside each other where a relationship existed. Where Jennens modified
passages, he did so to make them scan better and to keep the texts in
the third tense throughout. Handel, although a rough-tongued man,
claimed to know the Bible as well as any bishop and made a few
alterations himself. Jennens, a devout Anglican, intended through his
libretto to challenge the Deists who denied Christ's divinity: "And
his name shall be called Wonderful, Counselor, the Mighty God, the
Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace."
He succeeded in his intent, for
Messiah
portrays Christ as Son of God, the fulfillment of prophecy, Savior of
the world, and coming King. John Newton, slaver turned clergyman,
preached fifty sermons on the text. Although Newton preached his series
as a rebuke to those who glorified the music above God's word, he said
that it comprehended all the principle truths of the Gospel. That
Jennens fused the words together without once backtracking or repeating
a passage demonstrates the perfectionism which made him a fussy
person.
Handel united the whole into a magnificent artwork, writing the work
in twenty-three fervent days, despite having already suffered a stroke.
The music often rises to great loveliness and power. Passion builds
until the climactic Hallelujah chorus. Of this chorus, Handel said in
his broken English, "I did think I did see all heaven before me and
the great God himself!"
Bibliography:
- Barne, Kitty. Introducing Handel. New York: Roy, 1960.
- Flower, Newman. George Frederick Handel, his personality and his
times. New York: Scribners, 1948.
- Grout, Donald J. A History of Western Music. New York: W.
W. Norton, 1960.
- Grove, Sir George, ed. "Handel, George Frederick." New
Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. London: Macmillan
Publishers; Washington, D.C.: Grove's Dictionaries of Music, 1985,
1980.
- "Handel, George Frederick." Dictionary of National
Biography. Edited by Leslie Stephen and Sidney Lee. London: Oxford
University Press, 1921 - 1996.
- Scholes, Percy Alfred. "Handel, George Frederick." In
The Oxford Companion to Music. Editor John Owen Ward. London,
New York: Oxford University Press, 1970.
- Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (Great Britain).
Portraits of Eminent Men, of Various Ages and Nations, with
Memoirs. London: C. Knight, 1845.
- Ruoff, Henry W. Masters of Achievement. Buffalo, New York:
Frontier Press, 1911.
- Zoff, Otto, Editor. Great Composers Through the Eyes of Their
Contemporaries. New York: Dutton, 1951.
- Various encyclopedia articles and books on music appreciation
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