Handel’s MESSIAH

George Frideric Handel remains one of the most admired composers of the Baroque era. Although today he is most well-known for his oratorios, especially Messiah, he was most famous in his own day as a composer of 42 Italian operas. Other compositions by Handel include other choral works, such as the Coronation Anthems and orchestral works, including the Water Music and The Music for the Royal Fireworks and many concerti grossi.

Handel was born in Halle, Germany in 1685 – the same year as two other Baroque masters, Johann Sebastian Bach and Domenico Scarlatti. Handel’s father was determined his son should become a lawyer, and did not encourage his interest in music.  Bowing to parental pressure, Handel enrolled in law school, but soon dropped out to become a professional musician, working for the Hamburg Opera Theater, first as a violinist and harpsichordist, and later as a composer. Hamburg was Germany’s most important center for Italian opera, and the energy and vitality of the theater must have whetted the young composer’s appetite for this new and wildly popular genre, because Handel left the next year for Florence, opera’s birthplace.

After three years in Italy, Handel returned to Germany in 1710, where he took charge of musical life at the court of Hanover – but Handel abandoned his post on a trip to London, where he lived for the rest of his life (Handel must have experienced heart-stopping anxiety a few years later when the Elector of Hanover – the employer he had deserted – was crowned King George I of England).

Handel composed 29 oratorios, including Israel in Egypt (1738), Saul (1738), L’Allegro, il Penseroso ed il Moderato (1740), Samson (1743), Semele (1743), Hercules (1734), Belshazzar (1734), Judas Maccabeus (1747), Joshua (1748), Susanna (1748), Solomon (1748), Theodora (1750), and Jephtha (1751), in addition to Messiah.

The idea for an oratorio called Messiah came not from Handel, but from Charles Jennens, a wealthy Englishman and literary scholar who edited Shakespeare’s plays. Jennens had been an admirer of Handel’s since at least 1725, when he had become a subscriber of Handel’s published operas, purchasing their scores as they were published. The two met in the mid 1730s, and Jennens soon after began collaborating with Handel, provided him with libretti for two oratorios before Messiah (Saul and L’Allegro), and two after (Belshazzar, and probably Israel in Egypt).

Jennens compiled the libretto of Messiah from the Bible, primarily the Old Testament (even the title of the work is a Hebrew word taken from the Old Testament). Rather than telling the story of Jesus narratively, it presents the significance of the Christian Messiah as a theological idea. Despite its religious subject matter, the libretto (and therefore the entire work) is clearly conceived of operatically: the Biblical texts were chosen and arranged by Jennens in the traditional operatic forms of recitative and aria (as well as choruses, and two pieces for orchestra alone), and the work’s three parts are subdivided into separate scenes, much like an opera.

Music Hall Dublin, place of the premiere performance.

Music Hall Dublin, place of the premiere performance.

Handel began Messiah on August 22, 1741, and completed it twenty-four days later. The scholar Clifford Bartlett writes that “such speed was not unusual, nor was the time of year. Not much happened in London during the summer, so it was a good time to get ahead with the preparation for the next season . . . Bach could produce a cantata, organizing the copying of parts, and rehearse and perform it every week: Three weeks to compose an oratorio without the immediate responsibility for organizing the performance was, therefore, ample. But, however hasty the composition, the power of the musical imagination, the wealth of ideas, the depth of inspiration, and the sheer variety of invention continue to astonish.”