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MESSIAHHANDEL’S
THE HEART FEELS IT FIRST
PRINCIPAL PARTNER
Sydney, Melbourne February/March 2017
Paul Dyer AO Artistic Director and ConductorAustralian Brandenburg Orchestra Brandenburg Choir
Lucía Martín Cartón SopranoNicholas Spanos CountertenorKyle Bielfield TenorDavid Greco Bass
Staging Constantine CostiCostume Concept Genevieve Graham, Charlotte MungomeryLighting Design Peter Rubie
PROGRAM Handel Messiah HWV56Scene 1: Darkness to LightScene 2: The Dream
Interval
Scene 3: Shame and MourningScene 4: Ecstatic Light
SydneyCity Recital HallWednesday 22 February, 7pm Friday 24 February, 7pm Wednesday 1 March, 7pm Friday 3 March, 7pm Saturday 4 March 7pm Matinee Saturday 4 March, 2pm
MelbourneMelbourne Recital CentreSaturday 25 February, 7pm Sunday 26 February, 5pm
Chairman’s 11Proudly supporting our guest artists.
The duration of this concert is approximately 2 hours including interval. We kindly request that you switch off all electronic devices during the performance.
PRINCIPAL PARTNER
HANDEL’S MESSIAH
1
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take-control-of-your-financial-future-ABO-180x222mm.indd 1 6/10/2016 10:27
ARTISTIC DIRECTOR’S MESSAGEThe music of George Frideric Handel is deeply personal to me. I have waited many years for the right moment to perform Messiah. It struck me when preparing Messiah that, of the tens of thousands of works in the Brandenburg’s library (the largest collection of period scores and parts in the southern hemisphere), over one third is Handel! This composer is right at the beating heart and soul of the Brandenburg and Messiah ignites my imagination.
Messiah is of course one of the most performed classical works of all time. Christmas has just passed and the famed Hallelujah chorus has been heard across the world. Since the 1800s the size of the orchestras and choirs performing Messiah swelled to hundreds of musicians - a far cry from Handel’s original intention! Tonight we return to the musical essence of Messiah; but this performance will be like no other you have seen.
Constantine Costi’s staging brilliantly captures movement and space and a real sense of theatre in his first collaboration with the Brandenburg. Drawing on shape and form from baroque art, a simple message of hope emerges from a dark and an almost dreamlike state.
The storytelling flows between the ethereal Brandenburg Choir and a quartet of stellar soloists including Lucía Martín-Cartón (soprano, Spain), Nicholas Spanos (countertenor, Greece), Kyle Bielfield (tenor, United States), and David Greco (bass, Australia).
Messiah is the story of one man.
Tonight is about passion and drama and joy.
The wait is over.
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Paul Dyer AOArtistic Director and Conductor
3Artistic Director Paul Dyer with Stage Director Constantine Costi
THE MUSICIANS ON PERIOD INSTRUMENTS
BRANDENBURG CHOIR
Baroque Violin 1Shaun Lee-Chen, Perth ConcertmasterMatt Bruce, Sydney* Associate ConcertmasterMatthew Greco, SydneyBianca Porcheddu, Canberra1 Simone Slattery, Adelaide
Baroque Violin 2Ben Dollman, Adelaide+*Catherine Shugg, Melbourne Aaron Brown, New York Rafael Font, Sydney
Baroque ViolaMonique O'Dea, Sydney+2
Marianne Yeomans, SydneyJames Eccles, Sydney
Baroque CelloJamie Hey, Melbourne+*
Anthea Cottee, Sydney Rosemary Quinn, Sydney
Double BassRob Nairn, Adelaide3
Baroque OboeKirsten Barry, Melbourne+*Kaori Katayama, Japan
Baroque BassoonJohn Myatt, Melbourne
Baroque TrumpetLeanne Sullivan, Sydney+ Rainer Saville, Sydney
TimpaniBrian Nixon, Sydney
TheorboTommie Andersson, Sydney*
Chamber OrganHeidi Jones, Sydney4
HarpsichordPaul Dyer, Sydney
Soprano Samantha EllisWei JiangBelinda MontgomeryJennifer RollinsJosie RyanAnna SandströmLauren StephensonAdria WatkinHester Wright
Alto Jonathan BorgPhil ButterworthTimothy Chung Chris Hopkins Mark NowickiPaul Tenorio
Tenor Oskar AnderssonSpencer DarbyMiguel IglesiasBrendan McMullanBlake Parham Paul SuttonRichard Sanchez
Bass Hayden BarringtonCraig EveringhamNick GilbertSébastien MauryPhilip MurrayRodney Smith
Paul Dyer AO Artistic Director and ConductorAustralian Brandenburg Orchestra Brandenburg Choir
Lucía Martín Cartón Soprano, SpainNicholas Spanos Countertenor, GreeceKyle Bielfield Tenor, United States of AmericaDavid Greco Bass, Australia
HANDEL’S MESSIAH
* Denotes Brandenburg Core Musician
+ Section Leader1 Bianca Porcheddu appears
courtesy of St. Francis Xavier College, Florey ACT (staff)
2 Monique O’Dea appears courtesy of Presbyterian Ladies’ College, Sydney (staff)
3 Rob Nairn appears courtesy of Penn State University Historical Performance Faculty, The Julliard School
4 Heidi Jones appears courtesy of SCEGGS Darlinghurst (staff)
Organ preparation by Joanna Tondys Harpsichord preparation by Joanna Tondys in Sydney and Alistair McAllister in Melbourne
Concertmaster Chair supported by Jacqui and John Mullen
Theorbo/ Baroque Guitar Chair supported by The Alexandra and Lloyd Martin Family Foundation and friends, in memory of Lloyd Martin AM
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PAUL DYER
In January 2013 Paul Dyer AO was awarded the Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) for his ‘distinguished service to the performing arts, particularly orchestral music as a director, conductor and musician, through the promotion of educational programs and support for emerging artists’ in recognition of his achievements as Co-founder and Artistic Director of the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra and Brandenburg Choir.
Paul Dyer is one of Australia’s leading specialists in period performance styles. He founded the Orchestra in 1990 and has been Artistic Director since that time. Paul has devoted his performing life to the harpsichord, fortepiano and the chamber organ as well as conducting the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra and Choir.
Paul completed postgraduate studies in solo performance with Bob van Asperen at the Royal Conservatorium in the Hague, performed with many major European orchestras and undertook ensemble direction and orchestral studies with Sigiswald Kuijken and Frans Brüggen.
Paul appears as soloist, continuo player and conductor with many major ensembles including the Sydney Symphony Orchestra, West Australian Symphony Orchestra, Queensland Orchestra, Australia Ensemble, Australian Chamber Orchestra, Opera Australia, Australian Youth Orchestra, Victorian State Opera, Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra, the Pacific Baroque Orchestra, Vancouver, and the Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment, London.
Paul has performed with many international soloists including Andreas Scholl, Cyndia Sieden, Marc Destrubé, Christoph Prégardien, Hidemi Suzuki, Manfredo Kraemer, Andrew Manze, Yvonne Kenny, Emma Kirkby, Philippe Jaroussky
and many others. In 1998 he made his debut in Tokyo with countertenor Derek Lee Ragin, leading an ensemble of Brandenburg soloists, and in August 2001 Paul toured the orchestra to Europe with guest soloist Andreas Scholl. As a recitalist, he has toured Germany, France, Belgium, the Netherlands and the United States.
Paul is an inspiring teacher and has been a staff member at various Conservatories throughout the world. In 1995 he received a Churchill Fellowship and he has won numerous international and national awards for his CD recordings with the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra and Choir, including the 1998, 2001, 2005, 2009 and 2010 ARIA Awards for Best Classical Album. Paul is Patron of St Gabriel’s School for Hearing Impaired Children. In 2003 Paul was awarded the Australian Centenary Medal for his services to Australian society and the advancement of music. In 2010 Paul was awarded the Sydney University Alumni Medal for Professional Achievement.6
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BRANDENBURG CHOIR
"There was vigour and passion in this performance just as there was great subtlety and finely shaded nuances of feeling and colour.”
Sydney Morning Herald
"The Brandenburg Choir was polished and responsive, powerfully conveying the work's celebratory magnificence in their full-voiced climaxes sung in unison."
The Australian
The Brandenburg Choir is renowned for its astonishing vocal blend and technical virtuosity. Established by Artistic Director Paul Dyer in 1999 to perform in the first-ever Noël! Noël! Brandenburg Christmas concert, the Choir has become a regular part of the Brandenburg year. The first Noël! Noël! concert combined medieval chant and polyphony as well as carols from around the world in their original settings and languages.
"Music from earlier centuries often requires the sound of the human voice. I wanted to put a group of excellent singers together adding a rich complement to our period instruments. Our Choir is a ravishing blend of radiant Sydney singers", says Paul Dyer.
Originally 13 voices, the Choir joined our Orchestra and wowed audiences with truly beautiful renditions of both familiar Christmas favourites and rarely-heard sacred works, performing music from the eleventh century to the baroque. It was an instant success, combining musical, literary and scholarly performances that thrilled audiences and critics alike.
Noël! Noël! has proven to be so popular, the Brandenburg have released their second live recording of the concert at City Recital Hall. A Celtic Christmas was recorded in 2013.
This beautiful collection of festive music is available in leading music stores. In addition to the annual Noël! Noël! concerts, the Choir now regularly performs as part of the Brandenburg’s annual subscription season. Bach Cantatas, Handel Coronation Anthems, and Mozart’s great Requiem and Coronation Mass are among the best loved performances of the Choir. Their performance of Handel's Ode for St Cecilia's Day received critical acclaim, with the Sydney Morning Herald declaring: "[The Brandenburg Choir is] one of the finest choruses one could put together in this town".
The current members of the Brandenburg Choir are all professional singers, many of whom also hold music degrees, but they do not all sing full time. From music teachers to lawyers, business managers to medical doctors and nurses, each member looks forward to the opportunity to perform with the Brandenburg throughout the year.
8 Standing: Jonathan Borg, Belinda Montgomery, Hester Wright, Hayden Barrington, Richard Sanchez Seated: Nick Gilbert, Spencer Darby, Anna Sandström, Lauren Stephenson, Oskar Andersson
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SOLOISTS
LUCÍA MARTÍN-CARTÓN Soprano (Spain)
Lucía Martín-Cartón began studying violin and singing in Valladolid, Spain and is a graduate of the Joaquín Rodrigo Conservatory in Valencia and the Escola Superior de Música de Catalunya. She won the 6th Renata Tebaldi International Voice Competition: Ancient and Baroque Repertoire.
Lucía regularly performs with Les Arts Florissants, Cappella Mediterranea, Le Concert des Nations, Orquesta Ciudad de Granada, with conductors including William Christie, Jordi Savall, Leonardo García Alarcón, Paul Agnew and Alexis Kossenko, amongst others. She has performed in numerous concert halls, notably La Philharmonie de Paris, Château de Versailles, Sydney Opera House, Melbourne Recital Centre, KKL Luzern, Suntory Hall (Tokyo), Lincoln Center (New York), Teatro de la Zarzuela (Madrid), Tchaikovsky Concert Hall (Moscow), Hong Kong City Hall, L’Auditori de Barcelona, and Salle Flagey (Brussels).
Lucía has recorded with labels Brilliant, AliaVox and Ricercar, and released live recordings with Radio France, Radio Catalunya Música and Musiq’3 Belgium.Lucía is part of William Christie’s ensemble Le Jardin des Voix 2015 and has performed in several concerts in Europe, Asia, Australia and New York.
NICHOLAS SPANOS Countertenor (Greece)
Nicholas Spanos began his studies in Greece before completing his studies at the University of Maryland School of Music (USA) and the Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst in Vienna.
Nicholas has performed with the National Opera of Greece, Opera Lorraine, Athens State Orchestra, Thessaloniki State Orchestra, National Theatre of Greece, Orchestra of Colours, Bach Sinfonia (USA), Denmark Radio Symphony Orchestra, Camerata Stuttgart, Venice Baroque Orchestra, Les Talens Lyriques, Armonia Atenea, Ensemble Alraune.
He was awarded the Best Young Artist of the Year by the Association of Theater and Music Critics of Greece and First Prize at the “TECHNI” National Competition for Lyric Singers.
Awarded recordings include Handel’s Oreste (2004) and Tamerlano (2006), and a CD based on Metastasio's Olimpiade libretto with the Venice Baroque Orchestra (2011). In 2014 Nicholas was the first to revive the role of Ruggiero in Ristori's Le Fate with Ensemble Alraune, released on DVD.
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SOLOISTS
KYLE BIELFIELD Tenor (USA)
A graduate of The Juilliard School and New York University, Kyle Bielfield has won several awards, including the Juilliard Honors Recital in Alice Tully Hall. He has performed in productions and galas with New York City Opera, The Metropolitan Opera, New York Festival of Song, American Lyric Theater, Center City Opera, The Florida Grand Opera, and Juilliard Opera.
Kyle has performed in such prestigious venues as Carnegie Hall, Alice Tully Hall, Avery Fisher Hall, and Merkin Hall in New York. Recent engagements include a Metropolitan Opera Workshop of a new opera, entitled The Sorrows of Frederick, by composer Scott Wheeler and librettist Romulus Linney; a production of Curlew River with Ballet Opera Pantomime in Montréal, and participation in the Ravinia Festival’s Steans Music Institute in Chicago.
Kyle uniquely maintains vibrant and successful careers in both the classical and pop music worlds. Bielfield is Kyle Bielfield’s Pop Alter Ego and stage name. 2017 will see the release of his first album with Sony Music Australia, a follow up to his 2016 Boom & Bust EP release. His debut American Art Song album Stopping By was released through Delos Music in 2014. www.bielfield.com
DAVID GRECO Bass (Australia)
Australian-born international baritone David Greco has been engaged by some of the world’s most exceptional ensembles and festivals, including Festival Aix-en Provence, Glyndebourne Festival Opera, The Academy of Ancient Music under Richard Egarr, and Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra under Ton Koopman.
David was a bass Lay Clerk at Westminster Abbey Choir in 2013 and at the Sistine Chapel Choir in Rome in 2014.
2016 saw David’s debut as a principal artist with Opera Australia and soloist with Sydney Symphony.
Highlights of 2017 include Handel’s Messiah and Bach’s Matthäus-Passion with Sydney Philharmonia Choirs, Monteverdi’s Il Coranazione di Poppea with Pinchgut Opera and a debut song recital of Schubert – ‘Love in the Age of Syphilis’ with Erin Helyard at the Melbourne Recital Centre.
David’s Naxos Recording debut ‘Poems of Love & War’ was recently released, featuring arias by New Zealand composer, Jack Body.
www.davidgreco.info
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AUSTRALIAN BRANDENBURG ORCHESTRA
“...What stands out at concert after concert is the impression that this bunch of musicians is having a really good time. They look at each other and smile and laugh... there’s a warmth and sense of fun not often associated with classical performance.”
Sydney Morning Herald
The Australian Brandenburg Orchestra, led by charismatic Artistic Director Paul Dyer, celebrates the music of the sixteenth, seventeenth and eighteenth centuries with excellence, flair and joy. Comprising leading specialists in informed performance practice from all over Australia, the Brandenburg performs using original edition scores and instruments of the period, breathing fresh life and vitality into baroque and classical masterpieces – as though the music has just sprung from the composer’s pen.
The Orchestra’s name pays tribute to the Brandenburg Concertos of J.S. Bach, whose musical genius was central to the baroque area. Celebrating their 27th anniversary in 2016, the Brandenburg continues to deliver exhilarating performances.
The Brandenburg has collaborated with such acclaimed and dynamic virtuosi as Andreas Scholl, Philippe Jaroussky, Kristian Bezuidenhout, Emma Kirkby, Andreas Staier, Elizabeth Wallfisch, Genevieve Lacey, Andrew Manze and more.
Through its annual subscription series in Sydney and Melbourne, the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra performs before a live audience in excess of 51,000 people, and hundreds of thousands more through national broadcasts on ABC Classic FM. The Orchestra also has a regular commitment to performing in regional Australia. Since 2003 the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra has been a member of the Major Performing Arts Group, which comprises
28 flagship national arts organisations supported by the Australia Council for the Arts. The Orchestra began regular touring to Queensland in 2015.
Since its beginning, the Brandenburg has been popular with both audiences and critics. In 1998 The Age proclaimed the Brandenburg “had reached the ranks of the world’s best period instrument orchestras”. In 2010 the UK’s Gramophone Magazine declared “the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra is Australia’s finest period-instrument ensemble. Under their inspiring musical director Paul Dyer, their vibrant concerts and recordings combine historical integrity with electrifying virtuosity and a passion for beauty”.
The Australian proclaimed that “a concert with the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra is like stepping back in time, as the sounds of period instruments resurrect baroque and classical works with reverence and authority”.
The Brandenburg’s 20 recordings with ABC Classics include five ARIA Award winners for Best Classical Album (1998, 2001, 2005, 2009 and 2010). In 2015 the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra was the recipient of the Sidney Myer Performing Arts Group Award and in 2016 the Helpmann Award for Best Chamber Concert.
Discover more at brandenburg.com.au
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Handel started to compose Messiah on the 28th of August 1741. He had drafted it by the 12th of September, and then spent two more days filling in the orchestration. It took him just seventeen days to write one of the greatest and most enduring musical works, but had it not been for the hostility between King George II and his son Frederick, Prince of Wales, it may not have been composed at all.
HANDEL’S MESSIAH
From that time to the present, this great work has been heard in all parts of the kingdom with increasing reverence and delight; it has fed the hungry, clothed the naked, fostered the orphan, and enriched succeeding managers of the Oratorios, more than any single production in this or any country.
Charles Burney, An Account of the Musical Performances at Westminster Abbey in commemoration of Handel, 1785
{George Frideric Handel (1685 - 1759)
Handel was born in Germany and worked as a violinist and composer at the opera house in Hamburg for four years. When he was twenty-one he travelled to Italy to work as a composer before moving permanently to England in 1712.
Handel produced an enormous number of works in every musical genre of his time. He was one of the most famous and successful opera composers in the Baroque period, and he wrote forty-two Italian operas in all, including Alcina and Giulio Cesare (Julius Caesar), nearly all for the London stage. It was only much later in his career that he turned to English oratorios (a genre he developed), and he composed eighteen of them. Given the fame of his Musick for the Royal Fireworks and the Water Musick Suite, he wrote fewer orchestral works than one might expect, but they include two sets of concerto grossos (his Opus 3 and Opus 6) which are hailed as one of the masterpieces of Baroque music. Handel was a keyboard virtuoso, and he wrote many solo pieces for harpsichord and organ.
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HANDEL’S MESSIAH
Messiah and Politics
George, Elector of Hanover, inherited the English throne when Queen Anne died in 1714. He was fifty-first in line and only the Queen’s second cousin, however fifty other closer relatives were ineligible due to being Roman Catholic. Now George I of England, he moved there with his son, also George (later George II) and George’s wife Caroline, forcing them to leave their seven-year-old son Frederick in Hanover. They were not to see him again until 1728, when George I died and George II became king, and Frederick, now aged twenty-one, was finally permitted to travel to England. It was a far from joyful reunion and what little relationship existed between parents and son soon deteriorated into fear and loathing on both sides. His mother Queen Caroline declared him to be ‘the greatest ass and the greatest beast in the whole world’, and seeing him go by was heard to exclaim, ‘Look, there he goes! That wretch! That villain!’.
Frederick made a point of opposing his parents in everything. They were still very German, despite having lived in England for fourteen years, so he enthusiastically embraced all things English, including cricket (he played for Surrey), and he also supported the political group which opposed his father’s government. He particularly resented the King and Queen’s patronage of the arts, and because they supported Handel and his opera company, Frederick supported members of the nobility who set up their own rival company. The Opera of the Nobility poached Handel’s best singers and drew the support of wealthy patrons away from Handel’s own company. According to the courtier Lord Hervey,
The King and Queen … were both Handelists, and sat freezing constantly at his empty Haymarket Opera, whilst the Prince with all the chief of the nobility went as constantly to that of Lincoln’s Inn Fields. … An anti-Handelist was looked upon as an anti-courtier; and voting against the Court in Parliament was hardly a less remissible or more venial sin than speaking against Handel or going to the Lincoln’s Inn Fields Opera. …
Queen Caroline was heard to say furiously that Frederick’s popularity ‘makes me vomit’, while the King stated that ‘he did not think … the ruin of one poor fellow [Handel] so generous or so good-natured a scheme as to do much honour to the undertakers’.
Handel managed to keep his company afloat, seeing out the rival company which collapsed in 1737, but he sustained heavy financial losses and the stress took its toll on his health.
The ingenious Mr. Handell is very much indispos’d, and it’s thought with a Paraletick Disorder, he having at present no Use of his Right Hand.
The London Evening Post, 14 May 1737
With finances tight, and sensing that in any case the London public was beginning to lose its taste for Italian opera, Handel decided to introduce English oratorios into his subscription seasons of opera. The English oratorio was a completely new musical genre developed by Handel for pragmatic as much as
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As soon as Handel had completed the scores of Messiah and Samson he travelled to Dublin, arriving there in November 1741. Shortly after arriving he announced a subscription series of six Musical Entertainments (oratorios and one unstaged opera). These sold so well that he announced a second series, and then a charity performance of Messiah, which premiered officially on the 13th of April after a public rehearsal three days earlier. Ladies were asked to come without hoops in their skirts and gentlemen without their swords, to make room for more people. A second performance took place on the 25th of May.
Handel had written to friends that he would not mount a subscription season again that year, but apparently buoyed by his success in Dublin he did exactly that on his return to London in August. He scheduled Messiah for the 23rd of March, but even before it was performed he was attacked in the newspapers by those who were scandalised by ‘a religious Performance in a Playhouse’, and the performance was ‘but indifferently relished’. He did not perform it again until 1745 and then once more in 1749, but it was not until he performed it as a charity fundraiser at the Foundling Hospital orphanage in London in 1750 that Messiah really took off. A huge audience of 1,400 attended, and the chapel was so packed that people had to be turned away. A second performance two weeks later was similarly attended, and from then on Handel included Messiah in every season until his death in 1759.
On Tuesday last Mr. Handel’s Sacred Grand Oratorio, The Messiah, was performed at the New Musick-Hall in Fishamble-street … Words are wanting to express the exquisite Delight it afforded to the admiring crouded Audience. The Sublime, the Grand, and the Tender, adapted to the most elevated, majestick and moving Words, conspired to transport and charm the ravished Heart and Ear.
The Dublin Journal, 13–17 April 1742
{First Performances: Messiah in the 1740s
artistic reasons. Oratorios were not staged, thereby saving on sets and costumes. They required less rehearsal time, and he could use mainly English singers rather than expensive Italian imports. They proved to be popular not just with the upper-class audience which patronised the opera but with the newly well-off middle class, and they made Handel so much money – for relatively little effort – that he gradually stopped composing operas altogether.
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HANDEL’S MESSIAH
Messiah was conceived by its librettist, Charles Jennens, a cultured man with deeply-held religious principles who had already provided Handel with the libretti of Saul and Israel in Egypt. The libretto, or word-book, consists entirely of short passages from the Old and New Testaments of the Bible, selected and arranged by Jennens.
Although Messiah’s subject is sacred, in many ways it is quite different from oratorios such as Samson or Jephtha, which are like unstaged operas. They have a plot and characters who tell the story through recitative (sung speech) and sing arias about their own reactions to what is happening. Messiah has no continuous narrative and only two characters who appear fleetingly – the angels who appear to the shepherds in Part I and the chorus who momentarily become the crowd calling for Christ’s execution (‘He trusted in God’) in Part II. Otherwise soloists and chorus provide commentary, as faithful believers.
Like other oratorios it is divided into three parts, similar to the three acts of an Italian opera. Part I is centred around the coming of Christ. It begins with prophecies foretelling the birth of a saviour, followed by the prophecy of the birth of Jesus, and the angel’s announcement of the birth itself to shepherds outside Bethlehem. Part II covers Christ’s crucifixion, his death and resurrection. Part III reflects on the promise of eternal life through Christ’s sacrifice.
Messiah is not primarily about the life of Jesus Christ. Rather, it is about the Christian belief in God’s redemption of humankind through the Messiah, Christ, and is a meditation on life and death, belief, faith, and sacrifice. These eternal themes still speak to us, even though our society today is far removed from that of eighteenth-century England with its very strong underpinning of Christianity.
‘I hope I shall persuade him to set another Scripture Collection I have made for him … I hope he will lay out his whole Genius & Skill upon it, that the Composition may excell all his former Compositions, as the Subject excells every other Subject. The Subject is Messiah.’
Charles Jennens, 10 July 1741
{The words
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The music
Within the three parts, Jennens arranged the texts into sections similar to scenes in an opera, and then arranged them further into recitative, aria, and chorus. This structure is particularly evident in the more obviously narrative sections of Part I.
Every time Handel performed Messiah he altered it to suit the singers he had at his disposal, so no individual version can be regarded as the definitive score. This could mean anything from re-assigning an aria from one voice type to a different voice type with minimal rewriting, to omitting some arias or choruses completely and substituting new ones. For example, the aria But who may abide exists in six versions, for soprano, alto, and bass, while there are seven versions of He shall feed his flock.
Oratorio vs. Opera
An oratorio was ‘a musical Drama, whose Subject must be Scriptural, and in which the Solemnity of Church-Musick is agreeably united with the most pleasing Airs of the Stage’, according to Newburgh Hamilton, librettist for Samson which Handel composed straight after Messiah. In England at this time, the text of an oratorio was always in English (operas of the same period were in Italian), and there were many more and much bigger choruses than in operas, which in this period often had only one chorus at the very end.
Operagoers were used to an evening’s entertainment at the theatre which lasted five hours, with three acts, so when Handel came to write oratorios he followed roughly the same model, dividing the work into three parts with intervals in between. Oratorios tended to be shorter than operas, and Handel scheduled instrumental works such as entire organ concertos in the intervals to pad out the evening, so that audiences would not go away feeling short-changed. Handel was a keyboard virtuoso, and he performed many of the instrumental works himself.
Handel always intended his oratorios as entertainment, to be performed in playhouses or theatres, and they were never meant to be sung as part of a church service (as Mozart’s masses, or J.S. Bach’s Passions were, for example).
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Scene 1: Darkness to Light
Instrumental Sinfony
Tenor Comfort ye my people
Tenor Ev’ry valley shall be exalted
Chorus And the glory of the Lord
Bass Thus saith the Lord
Alto But who may abide the day of His coming?
Chorus And He shall purify
Alto Behold, a virgin shall conceive
Alto and Chorus O thou that tellest good tidings to Zion
Bass For behold, darkness shall cover the earth
Bass The people that walked in darkness
Chorus For unto us a child is born
Art
Opposite: The Calling of Saint Matthew Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio(1599-1600)Contarelli Chapel, Church of San Luigi dei Francesi, Rome, Italy
Messiah, which was divided by Handel and Jennens into three parts, has been reimagined by Paul Dyer and Constantine Costi into four scenes for these performances. The staging and realisation of each of these four scenes have been inspired by an artwork from the Baroque period, which has been selected by the staging director, Constantine Costi.
{
HANDEL’S MESSIAH AND ART
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HANDEL’S MESSIAH AND ARTScene 2: The Dream
Instrumental Pifa
Soprano There were shepherds abiding in the field
Soprano And lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them
Soprano And the angel said unto them
Soprano And suddenly there was with the angel
Chorus Glory to God
Soprano Rejoice greatly
Alto Then shall the eyes of the blind be open’d
Soprano and Alto He shall feed his flock
Art
Opposite: Triumph of Bacchus Diego Velázquez(1628)Prado Museum, Madrid, Spain
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HANDEL’S MESSIAH AND ARTScene 3: Shame and Mourning
Chorus Behold the Lamb of God
Alto He was despised
Chorus Surely He hath borne our griefs
Chorus And with His stripes
Chorus All we, like sheep, have gone astray
Tenor All they that see Him laugh Him to scorn
Chorus He trusted in God
Tenor Thy rebuke hath broken His heart
Tenor Behold and see if there be any sorrow
Soprano How beautiful are the feet
Art
Opposite: The Seven Works of MercyMichelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio(1607)Pio Monte della Misericordia, Naples, Italy
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Scene 4: Ecstatic Light
Bass Why do the nations so furiously rage together
Chorus Let us break their bonds asunder
Chorus Hallelujah
Soprano I know that my Redeemer liveth
Chorus Since by man came death
Bass Behold, I tell you a mystery
Bass The trumpet shall sound
Chorus Worthy is the Lamb
Chorus Amen
Art
Opposite: The Complete Reconciliation of the Queen and her SonPeter Paul Rubens (1621–1625)Louvre Museum, Paris, France
HANDEL’S MESSIAH AND ART
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HANDEL’S MESSIAH
What to listen for: Part I
Messiah begins with a French overture, a form which Handel always used to begin an opera. It has a slow, majestic, double-dotted first section, followed by a faster fugal second section.
The technique of word painting – using the music to depict the text – was an expressive device frequently used in Baroque music, and one in which Handel was particularly adept. There are many examples of this throughout Messiah, beginning with the very first aria, Every valley shall be exalted, sung by the tenor. Handel set the text such that the pitch on the second syllable of ‘valley’ suddenly drops, while the melodic line rises on ‘exalted’. ‘Crooked’ and ‘rough’ are set on groups of short notes, contrasted with longer, held notes for ‘straight’ and ‘plain’. Similarly, in the aria O thou that tellest, the second syllable of ‘arise’ is always higher than the first, and ‘up’ is literally lifted to a higher note than ‘get thee’ which precedes it.
Handel re-composed the aria But who may abide for the castrato Gaetano Guadagni, raising it an octave from bass to alto register, speeding up the second section and adding bravura passages of runs. The orchestra adds the ‘sparks’ of ‘the refiner’s fire’.
It was standard in opera in this period to use recitative to propel the narrative. Recitative is a passage of sung speech in free time, usually with minimal accompaniment on the harpsichord or other continuo instruments. There are very few occasions where Handel uses this kind of ‘simple’ recitative in Messiah, for example when the angel speaks to the shepherds (‘Fear not’). Much more often the recitatives are accompanied by the full string section with dramatic effects. An example is the recitative For behold, darkness shall cover the earth, which introduces the bass aria The people that walked in darkness. Both recitative and aria are in a gloomy ‘dark’ minor key. The accompaniment to the recitative consists of repeated slow semiquavers with barely changing harmony, evoking thick fog rolling in from the sea (‘darkness shall cover the earth’). Both vocal and orchestral parts very gradually start to ascend in pitch on ‘arise’, arriving at the highest point for ‘upon’ (‘but the Lord shall arise upon thee’). In the aria the melodic line rises on ‘have seen a great light’, bursting out into the brightness of a major key. The orchestra and voice are in unison for much of the aria, a style of composition which was especially used to accompany bass singers in late Baroque operas.
Handel inserted a short instrumental interlude into Part I, just before the angel appears to the shepherds in the field outside Bethlehem. He entitled it ‘Pifa’, a reference to a ‘piffero’, a bagpipe-like instrument traditionally played by shepherds. This is a pastoral, a form commonly used in Christmas music in this period. The gentle triple time and drone bass would have immediately set the scene for his audience.
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What to listen for: Part II
After the lightness and positivity of Part I, Part II begins in a much more sombre mood with the chorus, Behold the Lamb of God. It is in the form of the first section of a French overture, the curtain raiser which hints at the drama to follow. The subject is too serious to follow with the usual fugue. Handel stayed in a minor key throughout the entire section which deals with Christ’s death. Even the short chorus, All we, like sheep, which starts in a cheerful major key, ends in the minor to underline the gravity of the last line, 'the Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all'. Handel wrote Messiah for professional singers and this very difficult chorus is another example of word painting, with fiendish melismas on the words ‘astray’ and ‘turning’.
To stand or not to stand during the ‘Hallelujah’ chorus
King George II was supposed to have been so moved by ‘for the Lord God omnipotent reigneth’ that he leapt to his feet mid-performance, and when the monarch stood the protocol of the day demanded that everyone else did so too. In a more democratic era this tradition is followed less and less, and in any case the story is almost certainly untrue. There is no evidence that George II ever attended a Messiah performance, and the story of the audience standing ‘together with the king’ comes from a letter written in 1780, by which time both Handel and George II were long dead.
A particularly delightful instance of word painting occurs in the orchestral postlude at the end of the angels’ ‘Glory to God’ chorus. The notes become softer, the texture more sparse and the pitch higher, as the angels gracefully retreat back into heaven.
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HANDEL’S MESSIAH
Handel originally scored Messiah for strings alone and no winds, probably because he was unsure whether he could get good enough players in Dublin. Trumpeters and drummers were another matter. They were freely available in military and city bands because of the need to play ceremonial music, and Handel uses them in Messiah for exactly that purpose in Glory to God in Part I, in the Hallelujah chorus, in the bass aria The trumpet shall sound in Part III, and in the final movement, Worthy is the Lamb.
Handel had significant experience in writing choruses and showed incredible variety in his approach, making changes in mood, speed and texture to underline the meaning of the text often in the same chorus. In the Hallelujah chorus he extended the music on the words ‘And he shall reign for ever’: firstly all parts sing it fugally, then the lower parts continue to sing those words while the upper parts and finally just the sopranos sing thrilling long notes at higher and higher pitches on ‘king of kings, and lord of lords’ to demonstrate the breadth of the Messiah’s power.
What to listen for: Part III
By the time Handel wrote Messiah he had already moved away from the three part da capo aria form which was standard in Baroque operas, although some of the arias in Messiah do conform to that structure, for example He was despised in Part II. For I know that my redeemer liveth, he came up with an entirely new musical idea, repeating the opening phrase to unify the three sections of scripture which Jennens provided.
The conclusion of the work, the final chorus Worthy is the Lamb, commences with no introduction other than a single weighty chord from the orchestra. Handel follows this with not one but two fugues, the first on the words ‘Blessing and honour, glory and power’, and the second a massive, complex extended fugue on the single word ‘Amen’.
Part II ends with arguably the best known piece of classical music ever written, the ‘Hallelujah’ chorus. {
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Year Handel Contemporary events
1685 Born in Halle, Germany JS Bach born
1710 Appointed music director to the Elector of Hanover Beijing becomes biggest city in the world
1711 First London opera Rinaldo performed Vivaldi famous throughout Europe as virtuoso violinist and composer
1712 Moves to England permanently Dutch East India company ship wrecked off the coast of Western Australia
1713 Dismissed from the court of Hanover; granted annual pension by Queen Anne of Great Britain Fahrenheit begins to use mercury in thermometers
1714 Composes Te Deum to welcome new royal family
Queen Anne dies; Elector of Hanover proclaimed George I King of Great Britain
1717 Composes Water Musick Thousands die in North Sea floods
1724 Premiere of opera Giulio Cesare First performance of JS Bach’s St John Passion in Leipzig
1725 Premiere of Rodelinda Vivaldi’s Four Seasons published
1727 Composes Zadok the Priest for the coronation of George II
First performance of JS Bach’s St Matthew Passion in Leipzig
1732 Includes oratorio (Esther) for the first time in his opera season Theatre opened at Covent Garden
1733 Rival opera company established in London Slave rebellion in the West Indies
1737 Ill with 'paralectic disorder' Queen Caroline dies
1740 First time schedules no Italian opera performances Maria Theresa becomes emperor of Austria
1741 Composes Messiah and Samson; travels to Dublin Vivaldi dies poor and alone in Vienna, aged 63
1742 Messiah premieres in Dublin Celsius devises centigrade thermometer
1743 Messiah premieres in London Thomas Jefferson born
1745 Messiah included in oratorio season English army rout supporters of Bonnie Prince Charlie at the Battle of Culloden
1749 Composes Musick for the Royal FireworksA rhinoceros exhibited in Paris creates sensation & inspires wigs à la rhinocéros
1750 Messiah performed to huge crowd at the Foundling Hospital JS Bach dies
1751 Begins to go blind; composes JephthaNew Year’s Day occurs on 25 March for the last time in England and Wales
1759 Dies aged 74; 3,000 people attend his funeral Mozart is 3 years old, Haydn is 27
1770 Messiah first performed in America Captain Cook lands at Botany Bay
1789 Mozart's arrangement of Messiah performed in Vienna Start of the French Revolution
1836 Messiah first performed in Australia HMS Beagle carrying Charles Darwin arrives in Sydney
1859 Messiah performed at Crystal Palace, London, by 3,000 people Work begins on the Suez Canal
© Program notes and timeline Lynne Murray 201729
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Paul DyerArtistic Director, Conductor, Harpsichord
Shaun Lee-ChenConcertmaster
Matt BruceAssociate Concertmaster
Matthew GrecoBaroque Violin 1
Bianca PorchedduBaroque Violin 1
Simone Slattery Baroque Violin 1
Ben DollmanBaroque Violin 2
Catherine ShuggBaroque Violin 2
Aaron BrownBaroque Violin 2
Rafael FontBaroque Violin 2
Monique O’DeaBaroque Viola
Marianne YeomansBaroque Viola
James EcclesBaroque Viola
Jamie HeyBaroque Cello
Anthea CotteeBaroque Cello
Rosemary QuinnBaroque Cello
Rob NairnDouble Bass
Kirsten BarryBaroque Oboe
Kaori KatayamaBaroque Oboe
John MyattBaroque Bassoon
Leanne SullivanBaroque Trumpet
Rainer SavilleBaroque Trumpet
Brian Nixon Timpani
Tommie AnderssonTheorbo
Heidi JonesChamber Organ
AUSTRALIAN BRANDENBURG ORCHESTRA
Oskar Andersson TenorHayden Barrington Bass
Samantha EllisSoprano
Wei JiangSoprano
Belinda MontgomerySoprano
Jennifer RollinsSoprano
Josie Ryan Soprano
Anna SandströmSoprano
Lauren StephensonSoprano
Adria WatkinSoprano
Hester WrightSoprano
Jonathan BorgAlto
Phil Butterworth Alto
Timothy Chung Alto
Chris HopkinsAlto
Mark NowickiAlto
Paul Tenorio Alto
Oskar AnderssonTenor
Spencer Darby Tenor
Miguel IglesiasTenor
Brendan McMullanTenor
Blake ParhamTenor
Paul SuttonTenor
Richard Sanchez Tenor
Hayden BarringtonBass
Craig Everingham Bass
Nick GilbertBass
Sébastien MauryBass
Philip MurrayBass
Rodney Smith Bass
BRANDENBURG CHOIR
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Tommie Andersson32