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Program Notes
Written by Bill Hemminger

MESSIAH
By George Frideric Handel 
1685-1759

     George Frideric Handel was born Georg Friedrich Händel in 1685 in Halle, Germany.  The British took a great liking to his music early in his career, and Handel wisely chose to relocate to a country that supported him so generously with money and prestige; indeed, George II (King of England from 1727 to 1760 and also, interestingly, a German—so much for nuance-less nationalism) became Handel’s greatest patron.  In 1727 Handel became a British citizen.  Except for a few forays to the Continent after that, he remained in England until his death in 1759.  He was buried in Westminster Abbey.  Since his death, Handel’s music has become practically synonymous with the best in British culture; in the intervening years his reputation in that country has never waned.
     Born to a barber-surgeon (happily, since that time, these two career paths have split), Handel had the good fortune of relative fortune so that, when his father died early in the composer’s life, Handel could afford a quality education and a life free from debt.  From 1706-10 he travelled throughout Italy, where Baroque music flourished, absorbing the music of Corelli and Scarlatti while continuing to compose his own works.  Among other forms, he mastered those of the opera and solo cantata, which he adapted later in his oratorios.  Before Messiah was written in 1741, the British had tired of Italian operas, typically based on fairly scandalous plots and performed with even more scandalous celebrity singers.  Handel perspicaciously read the writing on the wall (or, in this case, on the manuscript page) and shifted to large-scale works with Biblical themes.
     As the whole world knows, Messiah was first performed not in Britain but in Ireland in 1742 (Ireland had to wait before being absorbed into Great Britain).  Yet George II appears to have been present, though no one knows if he stood up or not—or for what reason if he did.  The libretto of the oratorio was crafted by Charles Jennens from the King James Bible and from the Coverdale Psalter.  Part I of Messiah begins with Old Testament prophecies and concludes with the angels’ annunciation to the shepherds.  Part II is devoted to the passion of Jesus and ends with the spectacular “Hallelujah” chorus.  Part III celebrates Jesus’s resurrection and the redemption of all believers; a nine-fold Amen brings the entire oratorio to its triumphant conclusion.
     After 1750, Messiah was performed frequently in Britain.  Portions of the oratorio were extracted and performed regularly as anthems in church services.  By 1800, large-scale productions had become de rigueur.  Handel’s original score specified a small orchestra, mostly strings, and a small but strong singing ensemble.  One Berlin performance in 1788 brought 259 singers on stage; they were accompanied by an instrumental juggernaut of at least 142 players.  Large performances remained popular in the 19th century and prompted at least one critic, George Bernard Shaw, to lament the sacrifice of musical quality for the effect of musical pomposity.  A return to the apparent intentions of Handel’s original score began to take place in the 1970s, when Christopher Hogwood and, later, John Eliot Gardiner trimmed the size of both orchestra and chorus.

Program Notes
Written by Bill Hemminger

MESSIAH
By George Frideric Handel 
1685-1759

     George Frideric Handel was born Georg Friedrich Händel in 1685 in Halle, Germany.  The British took a great liking to his music early in his career, and Handel wisely chose to relocate to a country that supported him so generously with money and prestige; indeed, George II (King of England from 1727 to 1760 and also, interestingly, a German—so much for nuance-less nationalism) became Handel’s greatest patron.  In 1727 Handel became a British citizen.  Except for a few forays to the Continent after that, he remained in England until his death in 1759.  He was buried in Westminster Abbey.  Since his death, Handel’s music has become practically synonymous with the best in British culture; in the intervening years his reputation in that country has never waned.
     Born to a barber-surgeon (happily, since that time, these two career paths have split), Handel had the good fortune of relative fortune so that, when his father died early in the composer’s life, Handel could afford a quality education and a life free from debt.  From 1706-10 he travelled throughout Italy, where Baroque music flourished, absorbing the music of Corelli and Scarlatti while continuing to compose his own works.  Among other forms, he mastered those of the opera and solo cantata, which he adapted later in his oratorios.  Before Messiah was written in 1741, the British had tired of Italian operas, typically based on fairly scandalous plots and performed with even more scandalous celebrity singers.  Handel perspicaciously read the writing on the wall (or, in this case, on the manuscript page) and shifted to large-scale works with Biblical themes.
     As the whole world knows, Messiah was first performed not in Britain but in Ireland in 1742 (Ireland had to wait before being absorbed into Great Britain).  Yet George II appears to have been present, though no one knows if he stood up or not—or for what reason if he did.  The libretto of the oratorio was crafted by Charles Jennens from the King James Bible and from the Coverdale Psalter.  Part I of Messiah begins with Old Testament prophecies and concludes with the angels’ annunciation to the shepherds.  Part II is devoted to the passion of Jesus and ends with the spectacular “Hallelujah” chorus.  Part III celebrates Jesus’s resurrection and the redemption of all believers; a nine-fold Amen brings the entire oratorio to its triumphant conclusion.
     After 1750, Messiah was performed frequently in Britain.  Portions of the oratorio were extracted and performed regularly as anthems in church services.  By 1800, large-scale productions had become de rigueur.  Handel’s original score specified a small orchestra, mostly strings, and a small but strong singing ensemble.  One Berlin performance in 1788 brought 259 singers on stage; they were accompanied by an instrumental juggernaut of at least 142 players.  Large performances remained popular in the 19th century and prompted at least one critic, George Bernard Shaw, to lament the sacrifice of musical quality for the effect of musical pomposity.  A return to the apparent intentions of Handel’s original score began to take place in the 1970s, when Christopher Hogwood and, later, John Eliot Gardiner trimmed the size of both orchestra and chorus.