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NEW HANDEL BIOGRAPHY: Check out the Table of Contents. Read an excerpt. Buy it here (U.S. customers).

Name

HANDEL: A Music Lover's Guide (FOR SHIPMENT WITHIN THE U.S.)

Brief Description

viii, 363 pp. (including reference-only endnotes, glossary, bibliography, index), 1 photo

ISBN 978-0-9794785-0-5 / U.S.

Weight

1.28lb(s)

Shipping Cost

3.50

Extended Description

A well-researched biography of George Frideric Handel aimed at intelligent music lovers. It focuses on the composer's character, personality, faith and musical genius, and follows how, why, and when Messiah and his numerous other biblical oratorios developed. We're introduced to Handel through his devout Lutheran parents in Germany. We see how his own Lutheranism meshed with Anglicanism after his move to London in his mid-20s to become a solid, life-long faith. Handel is revealed as a man of wit, compassion, generosity and strong will, quick to anger but also quick to forgive. We follow him through deaths in his family, attempts by social-musical enemies to destroy him, bouts of serious paralysis and mental disturbance, blindness, and through his last days.

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$19.95

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BOOK EXCERPT

From: Chapter 16. Guns to Good Effect

   Exactly when Handel was asked to compose, or when he did compose, his Royal Fireworks Music is not known, but word of his intentions and other gossip about the event spread, especially among the upper classes. In a letter by a Hanover Square neighbor of Handel’s, Mrs. Susan Archer, to her friend Lydia Catherine, the Duke of  Chandos’s wife, Mrs. Archer says she is anticipating hearing Handel’s music, but adds, “His Majesty I hear is excessively out of Humour about the Fire Works.... I believe a good many people will lose their hearing...; there will be 26 Cannons & 3 Barrils of Gunpowder go [off] at once & ... Handell proposes his Musick shall be heard at the same time.” Wisely, in the actual event, the music was heard before the fireworks went off.

   The rehearsal at Vauxhall Gardens (without fireworks) involving Handel’s “band” of one hundred performers was itself an auspicious event. Originally scheduled for April 17, the rehearsal was finally held at noon on April 21 so that the Duke of Cumberland could be there (the General Advertiser had been keeping the public informed of the shifting dates). Astonishingly, 12,000 people paid half a crown each to hear the music rehearsed and to get a feel for the spectacle. This snarled traffic on London Bridge for three hours, perhaps the first traffic jam in history. The next day, the General Advertiser remarked on “the brightest and most numerous Assembly ever known at the Spring Garden, Vauxhall.” The paper then tantalized its readers with this curious tidbit: “Several Footmen who attended their Masters, &c. Thither, behaved very saucily, and were justly corrected by the Gentlemen for their Insolence.”

   There were equally huge numbers of people at the April 27 celebration. For us modern people used to massive crowds, the words of a Mr. Byrom in a letter to his wife on fireworks night puts this in mid-eighteenth century perspective: “I have before my eyes such a concourse of people as to be sure I never have or shall see again....” The pavilion, envisioned and realized by a theater stage designer, had steps leading to “a grand Area before the Middle Arch,” the whole structure being “extremely neat and pretty and grand to look at.” Handel’s one-hundred players performed from the area in front of the middle arch. The more privileged onlookers sat on scaffolding in order to get a good view of the proceedings and the fireworks.

   Handel’s music evidently went off without a hitch. However, the music having been played in the open air, the presence of the huge crowd and all the other goings-on allowed only those up close to hear it well, despite the hundred-member band. As part of a description of the King walking informally in the area, George Harris recorded in his diary: “...He walk’d up to the frame, & soon after[,] the music began playing from the centre, which was in a manner lost.--He heard some of it,

& then walked back to the Library.”

    If the audibility of the music was a problem, there were far more serious problems with the fireworks. “One or two” of the “rockets ... took a wrong direction, & turned off horizontal & fell among the spectators & did some mischief,” wrote Harris. Part of the great wooden structure caught fire, putting “all things into confusion.” It took about an hour to extinguish the blaze –  “with the help of engines.” Fortunately, no one died in the fire, but one woman in the Duke of Montagu’s box was badly burned after her hat and clothes caught fire. However, at least two other people died in accidents at the event: one man drowned in a nearby pond; another missed his footing at the top of the fireworks “machine” and pitched to the ground. Unfortunately we have no record of Handel’s own reaction to the event, including the unusual rehearsal. He did, however, find other occasions to use the Royal Fireworks Music. Along with the Water Music, it has survived to our day as his most popular orchestral music and is, appropriately enough, increasingly being used in connection with fireworks displays.

 Contents

  Prologue: Why Write This Kind of Biography of Handel?    vi

  1. A Thriving Shoot from a German Lutheran Root     1

  2. First Immersion in Music     14       

  3. A Brave New World in Italy    26      

  4. Rumors of Love, Matters of Character     35 

  5. Early Imprints on England    48  

  6. Passion for Opera, a Passion for Home    60

  7. Glory and Grim Reality in the Land of Angels     77 

  8. A Novel Species of Entertainment     91

  9. A Matter of Degrees    101 

  10. So Great a Shock: Palsy, Lunacy and Recovery     118

  11. Another Direction to His Studies     133          

  12. Maggots and a Faux Pas     146

  13. The Subject is Messiah     166

  14. Grand Chorusses – Ineffectual Labours    186

  15. A Blast of Hell: Civil War, Personal Pain    206 

  16. Guns to Good Effect    220   

  17. Feeding Foundlings in Messiah’s Name    236     

  18. Considering the Uncertainty of Human Life    252

  19. How Dark, O Lord, Are Thy Decrees    263       

  20. His Muses Have Not Left Him    278   

  21. The Third & Last & Degenerate Age of Music     294

  22. Before the Bard is Silenced    305        

  23. His Pen to the Service of God    315   

  Epilogue: Handel’s Impact    322   

  Endnotes     329  

  Glossary     345    

  Bibliography     349  

  Index    355

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