Dictionary Definition
Handel
Noun
1 a prolific German baroque composer remembered
best for his oratorio Messiah (1685-1759) [syn: George
Frederic Handel, Georg
Friedrich Handel]
2 the music of Handel
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Extensive Definition
George Frideric Handel (Friday, 23 February
1685 –
Saturday, 14
April 1759) was a German-born
Baroque
composer who is famous for his operas, oratorios and concerti
grossi. Born as Georg Friedrich Händel () in Halle,
he spent most of his adult life in England, becoming a subject of
the British crown on 22 January
1727. His most
famous works are Messiah,
an oratorio set to texts from the King James
Bible; Water
Music; and
Music for the Royal Fireworks. Strongly influenced by the
techniques of the great composers of the Italian Baroque and the
English composer Henry
Purcell, his music was known to many significant composers who
came after him, including Haydn,
Mozart,
and Beethoven.
Biography
Handel was born in Halle in the Duchy of Magdeburg (province of Brandenburg-Prussia) to Georg and Dorothea (née Taust) Händel in 1685, the same year that both Johann Sebastian Bach and Domenico Scarlatti were born. Handel displayed considerable musical talent at an early age; by the age of seven he was a skilful performer on the harpsichord and pipe organ, and at nine he began to compose music. However, his father, a distinguished citizen of Halle and an eminent barber-surgeon who served as valet and barber to the Courts of Saxony and Brandenburg, was opposed to his son's wish to pursue a musical career, preferring him to study law. By contrast, Handel's mother, Dorothea, encouraged his musical aspirations.Nevertheless, the young Handel was permitted to
take lessons in musical composition and keyboard technique from
Friedrich
Wilhelm Zachau, the organist of the Liebfrauenkirche, Halle.
His aunt, Anna, had given him a spinet for his seventh birthday,
which was placed in the attic so that Handel could play it whenever
he could get away from his father.
In 1702, following his father's wishes, Handel
began the study of law at the University
of Halle, but after his father's death the following year, he
abandoned law for music, becoming the organist at the Protestant
Cathedral. In 1704, he moved to Hamburg, accepting
a position as violinist and harpsichordist in the orchestra of the
opera house. There, he met Johann
Mattheson, Christoph
Graupner and Reinhard
Keiser. His first two operas, Almira and Nero, were
produced in 1705. Two other early operas, Daphne
and Florindo, were
produced in 1708.
During 1706–09, Handel travelled to Italy on the
invitation of Gian
Gastone de' Medici, and met Medici's brother
Ferdinando, a musician himself. While opera was banned by the
pope, Handel found work as a composer of sacred music; the famous
Dixit Dominus (1707) is from this era. He wrote many cantatas in operatic style for
gatherings in the palace of Pietro
Ottoboni (cardinal). His Rodrigo
was produced in Florence in 1707,
and his Agrippina
at Venice in
1709. Agrippina, which ran for an unprecedented 27 performances,
showed remarkable maturity and established his reputation as an
opera composer. Two oratorios, La
Resurrezione and Il Trionfo del Tempo, were produced in Rome in
1709 and 1710, respectively.
In 1710, Handel became Kapellmeister
to George, Elector of Hanover, who would
soon be King
George I of Great Britain. He visited
Anna Maria Luisa de' Medici on his way to London in 1710, where
he settled permanently in 1712, receiving a yearly income of £200
from Queen
Anne. During his early years in London, one of his most
important patrons was the young and wealthy
Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington, who showed an early love
of his music. Handel had a happy time and wrote a few of his best
pieces for the Earl.
In 1723 Handel moved into a newly built house in
25 Brook
Street, London, which he rented until his death in 1759. This
house is now the Handel
House Museum, a restored Georgian
house open to the public with an events programme of Baroque music.
There is a blue
commemorative plaque on the outside of the building. It was
here that he composed Messiah,
Zadok the
Priestand
Music for the Royal Fireworks. (In 2000, the upper stories of
25 Brook Street were leased to the Handel House Trust, and after an
extensive restoration program, the Handel
House Museum opened to the public on 8 November
2001.)
In 1726 Handel's opera Scipio
(Scipione) was performed for the first time, the march from
which remains the regimental slow march of the British Grenadier
Guards. He was naturalised a British subject in the following
year.
In 1727 Handel was commissioned to write four
anthems for the coronation ceremony of
King George II. One of these, Zadok the
Priest, has been played at every British coronation ceremony
since. Handel was director of the Royal Academy of Music 1720–1728,
and a partner of J.J.
Heidegger in the management of the King's
Theatre 1729–1734. Handel also had a long association with the
Royal
Opera House at Covent
Garden, where many of his Italian operas were premiered.
In April 1737, at age 52, he suffered a stroke or some other malady which
left his right arm temporarily paralysed and stopped him from
performing. He also complained of difficulties in focusing his
sight. Handel went to Aix-la-Chapelle,
taking hot baths and playing organ for the audience. Handel gave up
operatic management entirely in 1740, after he had lost a fortune
in the business.
Following his recovery, Handel focused on
composing oratoria instead of opera. Handel's Messiah
was first performed in New Musick Hall in Fishamble Street, Dublin
on 13
April 1742, with 26 boys and
five men from the combined choirs of
St Patrick's and
Christ Church cathedrals participating. In 1749 he composed
Music for the Royal Fireworks; 12,000 people came to listen.
Three people died, including one of the trumpeters on the day
after.
In 1750 Handel arranged a performance of Messiah
to benefit the Foundling
Hospital. The performance was considered a great success and
was followed by annual concerts that continued throughout his life.
In recognition of his patronage, Handel was made a governor of the
Hospital the day after his initial concert. He bequeathed a fair
copy of Messiah to the institution upon his death. His involvement
with the Foundling Hospital is today commemorated with a permanent
exhibition in London's Foundling
Museum, which also holds the Gerald Coke Handel
Collection.
In August 1750, on a journey back from Germany to
London, Handel was seriously injured in a carriage accident between
The
Hague and Haarlem in the
Netherlands. In
1751 his eyesight started to fail in one eye. The cause was unknown
and progressed into his other eye as well. He died some eight years
later, in 1759, in London, his last attended performance being his
own Messiah. More than three thousand mourners attended his
funeral, which was given full state honours, and he was buried in
Westminster
Abbey.
Handel never married, and kept his personal life
very private. Unlike many composers, he left a sizable estate at
his death—worth £20,000 (an enormous amount for the day), the bulk
of which he left to a niece in Germany—as well as gifts to his
other relations, servants, friends and to favourite
charities.
Works
Handel's compositions include 42 operas; 29 oratorios; more than 120 cantatas, trios and duets; numerous arias; chamber music; a large number of ecumenical pieces; odes and serenatas; and sixteen organ concerti. His most famous work, the Messiah oratorio with its "Hallelujah" chorus, is among the most popular works in choral music and has become a centerpiece of the Christmas season. Also popular are the Opus 3 and 6 Concerti Grossi, as well as "The Cuckoo and the Nightingale", in which birds are heard calling during passages played in different keys representing the vocal ranges of two birds. Also notable are his sixteen keyboard suites, especially The Harmonious Blacksmith.Handel introduced various previously uncommon
musical instruments in his works: the viola
d'amore and violetta
marina (Orlando), the lute (Ode for St. Cecilia's Day),
three trombones (Saul),
clarinets or small high
cornets (Tamerlano),
theorbo, French horn
(Water
Music), lyrichord,
double
bassoon, viola da
gamba, bell chimes,
positive
organ, and harp (Giulio
Cesare, Alexander's Feast).
Handel's works have been catalogued and are
commonly referred to by a HWV number. For
example, Handel's Messiah is also known as HWV 56.
Legacy
After his death, Handel's Italian operas fell into obscurity, save for selections such as the ubiquitous aria from Serse, "Ombra mai fu". His reputation throughout the 19th century and first half of the 20th century, particularly in the Anglophone countries, rested primarily on his English oratorios, which were customarily performed by enormous choruses of amateur singers on solemn occasions. These include Esther (1718); Athalia (1733); Saul (1739); Israel in Egypt (1739); Messiah (1742); Samson (1743); Judas Maccabaeus (1747); Solomon (1748); and Jephtha (1752). His best are based on a libretto by Charles Jennens.Since the 1960s¸, with the revival of interest in
baroque music, original
instrument playing styles, and the prevalence of countertenors who could
more accurately replicate castrato roles, interest has
revived in Handel's Italian operas, and many have been recorded and
performed onstage. Of the fifty he wrote between 1705 and 1738,
Agrippina (1709), Rinaldo
(1711, 1731), Orlando
(1733), Alcina (1735),
Ariodante
(1735), and Serse (1738, also
known as Xerxes) stand out and are now performed regularly in opera
houses and concert halls. Arguably the finest, however, are
Giulio
Cesare (1724) and Rodelinda (1725),
which, thanks to their superb orchestral and vocal writing, have
entered the mainstream opera repertoire.
Also revived in recent years are a number of
secular cantatas and
what one might call secular oratorios or concert operas. Of the
former,
Ode for St. Cecilia's Day (1739) (set to texts of John Dryden)
and
Ode for the Birthday of Queen Anne (1713) are particularly
noteworthy. For his secular oratorios, Handel turned to classical
mythology for subjects, producing such works as Acis and
Galatea (1719), Hercules
(1745), and Semele
(1744). In terms of musical style, particularly in the vocal
writing for the English-language texts, these works have close
kinship with the above-mentioned sacred oratorios, but they also
share something of the lyrical and dramatic qualities of Handel's
Italian operas. As such, they are sometimes performed onstage by
small chamber ensembles. With the rediscovery of his theatrical
works, Handel, in addition to his renown as instrumentalist,
orchestral writer, and melodist, is now perceived as being one of
opera's great musical dramatists.
Handel has generally been accorded high esteem by
fellow composers, both in his own time and since. Bach apparently
said "[Handel] is the only person I would wish to see before I die,
and the only person I would wish to be, were I not Bach." Mozart is
reputed to have said of him, "Handel understands effect better than
any of us. When he chooses, he strikes like a thunder bolt", and to
Beethoven he was "the master of us all". The latter emphasized
above all the simplicity and popular appeal of Handel's music when
he said, "Go to him to learn how to achieve great effects, by such
simple means."
He is commemorated as a musician in the
Calendar of Saints of the Lutheran
Church on July 28, with Johann
Sebastian Bach and Heinrich
Schütz.
Handel's works were edited by Samuel
Arnold (40 vols., London, 1787–1797), and by Friedrich
Chrysander, for the German Händel-Gesellschaft
(100 vols., Leipzig, 1858–1902).
Handel adopted the spelling "George Frideric
Handel" on his naturalization as a British subject, and this
spelling is generally used in English-speaking countries. The
original form of his name (Georg Friedrich Händel) is generally
used in Germany and elsewhere, but he is known as "Haendel" in
France, which causes no small amount of grief to cataloguers
everywhere. There was another composer with a similar name, Handl,
who was a Slovene and is
more commonly known as Jacobus
Gallus.
Media
See also
Notes
References
- Burrows, Donald. Handel. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994. ISBN 0-19-816470-X
- Deutsch, Otto Erich, Handel: A Documentary Biography, 1955.
- Frosch, W.A., The "case" of George Frideric Handel, New England Journal of Medicine, 1989; 321:765-769, Sep 14, 1989. http://content.nejm.org/content/vol321/issue11/index.shtml
- Harris, Ellen T. (general editor) The librettos of Handel's operas: a collection of seventy librettos documenting Handel's operatic career New York: Garland, 1989. ISBN 0-8240-3862-2
- Hogwood, Christopher. Handel. London: Thames and Hudson, 1984. ISBN 0-500-01355-1
- Keates, Jonathan. Handel, the man and his music. London: V. Gollancz, 1985. ISBN 0-575-03573-0
- Dean, Winton and John Merrill Knapp. Handel's Operas, 1704-1726 (Volume 1) Oxford: Clarendon Press. (1987; 2nd Ed. 1994 (softcover) ISBN 0-198-16441-6
- Meynell, Hugo. The Art of Handel's Operas The Edwin Mellen Press (1986) ISBN 0-889-46425-1
Further reading
- Dean, W. (2006) “Handel’s Operas, 1726-1741” (The Boydell Press)
External links
Scores and recordings
- www.kreusch-sheet-music.net Free Scores by Handel
- The Mutopia Project provides free downloading of sheet music and MIDI files for some of Handel's works.
- Handel cylinder recordings, from the Cylinder Preservation and Digitization Project at the University of California, Santa Barbara Library.
- Kunst der Fuge: George Frideric Handel - MIDI files
- Water Music, Organ Concertos op. 4, Tamerlano, etc. Creative Commons recordings
- Lorraine Hunt Lieberson sings Handel arias
Handel in Arabic: جورج فريدريك هاندل
Handel in Azerbaijani: Qeorq Fridrix
Handel
Handel in Bosnian: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Breton: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Bulgarian: Георг Фридрих Хендел
Handel in Catalan: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Czech: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Welsh: George Frideric Handel
Handel in Danish: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in German: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Estonian: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Modern Greek (1453-): Γκέοργκ
Χαίντελ
Handel in Spanish: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Esperanto: Georg Friedrich
Händel
Handel in Basque: George Frideric Handel
Handel in Persian: گئورگ فریدریش هندل
Handel in French: Georg Friedrich Haendel
Handel in Galician: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Korean: 게오르크 프리드리히 헨델
Handel in Croatian: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Indonesian: Georg Friedrich
Händel
Handel in Icelandic: Georg Friedrich
Händel
Handel in Italian: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Hebrew: גאורג פרידריך הנדל
Handel in Georgian: გეორგ ფრიდრიხ ჰენდელი
Handel in Swahili (macrolanguage): Georg
Friederich Händel
Handel in Latin: Georgius Fridericus
Handel
Handel in Latvian: Georgs Frīdrihs
Hendelis
Handel in Luxembourgish: Georg Friedrich
Händel
Handel in Lithuanian: Georg Friedrich
Händel
Handel in Hungarian: Georg Friedrich
Händel
Handel in Macedonian: Георг Фридрих Хендл
Handel in Malay (macrolanguage): Georg Friedrich
Händel
Handel in Dutch: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Japanese: ゲオルク・フリードリヒ・ヘンデル
Handel in Norwegian: Georg Friedrich
Händel
Handel in Norwegian Nynorsk: Georg Friedrich
Händel
Handel in Occitan (post 1500): Georg Friedrich
Händel
Handel in Piemontese: Georg Friedrich
Händel
Handel in Polish: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Portuguese: Georg Friedrich
Händel
Handel in Romanian: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Quechua: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Russian: Гендель, Георг Фридрих
Handel in Simple English: George Frideric
Handel
Handel in Slovak: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Slovenian: Georg Friedrich
Händel
Handel in Serbian: Георг Фридрих Хендл
Handel in Serbo-Croatian: Georg Fridrih
Hendl
Handel in Finnish: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Swedish: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Thai: จอร์จ เฟรดริก ฮันเดล
Handel in Vietnamese: George Frideric
Handel
Handel in Turkish: George Frideric Handel
Handel in Ukrainian: Гендель Ґеорґ
Фредерік
Handel in Volapük: Georg Friedrich Händel
Handel in Chinese:
格奥尔格·弗里德里希·亨德尔