G.F. Handel, Messiah
“Difficult” music, executed
by the most skillful musicians for the enjoyment of connoisseurs, is the
putative definition of great musical art.
Perhaps Bach’s great contrapuntal choral works can be so described. However,
the obverse seems to conflate the “popular,” with the “dispensable,” connoting
mere light fare. In the canon of choral
music, masterpieces of great genius, well suited for amateur performance, but
esteemed by almost all, might be reduced to only two works: Handel’s Messiah
and Brahms’s Requiem. In particular, Messiah has enjoyed an almost unique position as, perhaps, the most
frequently performed work in classical literature. The chorus, “Hallelujah,” the five most
quintessential minutes of grandeur known in music, thralls us, stirs us, and as
Shakespeare might say, “thunders like a Jove.”
The legends that have cropped up about this movement alone convey how
much reverence the work inspires. For
example, one story goes that George II rose in his seat upon hearing it,
impelling all present to do the same – thus, it has become a concert ritual to
stand when the chorus delivers. Another tale describes Joseph Haydn weeping
upon hearing it in 1791, and uttering that Handel was the “master of us all.” Almost all choruses in Messiah have an infectious pomp.
The choruses selected today combine magical doses of archaic splendor
with warm jocular dignity that both enchant and coax listeners to sing
along. Thus, for generations,
“sing-a-long” Messiahs, often termed
“Scratch Messiahs,” crop up during Advent with a regularity as the very season
itself.
Messiah is
also one of the most hastily composed works, occupying Handel a mere
twenty-four days in 1741. That it is such a treasure is astonishing. The first
public performance took place in Dublin, April 13, 1742. The text, compiled by Charles Jennens, a
wealthy landowner and amateur theologian, draws from both the Old and New
Testaments. In particular, prophetic sections of Isaiah are combined with various Psalm texts, and are juxtaposed
with messianic passages from Luke,
Corinthians, Romans, and
Revelation. The hurried manner of
composition, in part due to Handel’s deteriorating financial condition, is
belied by the consistent quality of each aria, recitative and chorus. Handel’s textual colorations were never so
skillful and subtle.
In today’s “Sing-In,”
thirteen sections from Part I (Advent and Christmas) are presented with an aria
and chorus from Part II (Romans X); the evening is capped off with the thrilling
final choruses of Part III.
But wait don’t leave: one more Hallelujah
for good measure!
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