Music Trade Review

Issue: 1917 Vol. 65 N. 13

Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
9
Comparatively Few of the Compositions of Handel Are at Present Available
in the Form of Music Rolls, but the Undying Popularity of the Works of This
Composer Should Create a Wide Market for Additional Cuttings of His Music
The person who has never paid any systematic
attention to the matter may wonder why it is
that musicians and those who are known as
music-lovers should always be "raving" over
this, that or the other composer of music. It
may be that the tastes of modern America are
not as refined as we would desire when the fine
arts are in question, and one may even doubt
whether the present generation is ever going to
be much better than it appears to be now, in
this respect. But it is too easy to judge super-
ficially of such matters. Away from the noise
and hurly-burly of the great cities, the plant
of musical culture is slowly but surely coming
to full bloom. All over the land, in little towns
of which the self-satisfied New Yorker or Chi-
cagoan has never heard, there are springing up
societies for choral singing and for orchestral
playing, for the promotion of concerts at which
great musicians shall appear and for the cultiva-
tion of community music. How many readers
of these words have heard of Lindsborg, Kan-
sas?
Lindsborg
Lindsborg is a town of about 2,000 inhabitants.
It is the home of Bethany College, a Swedish
denominational institution, which boasts an ac-
tivity in music simply extraordinary.
Each
year is given a colossal performance of Han-
del's "Messiah," with eminent soloists and a
chorus, native to the town, of six hundred voices,
organized by the Bethany Oratorio Society.
In addition, a band, a symphony orchestra of
sixty, a male chorus and a children's chorus are
maintained; and each year a week's festival of
music is given, to which come music lovers from
all over the Middle West. At the festival of
the present year, no less than sixteen separate
programs were given during the week, includ-
ing the performances of the "Messiah"; and
Ysaye, the violinist, appeared, with Galli-Curci
among the other soloists! That is going some!
Similar activities are going on in other places.
Remember the Bach Festival at Bethlehem, Pa.!
Oratorios
Now it is a remarkable fact that the kind of
music which most easily and splendidly at-
tracts the attention, the love and the work of
these wonderful native organizations is Ora-
torio. The study and performance of Bach's
Matthew Passion or of Handel's "Messiah" in-
volve preparation and rehearsal to a degree
which the uninitiated cannot conceive. The
amount of self-sacrifice required on the part of
those who take voluntarily without pay the
choral work in these performances can hardly
be realized by one who has not been through
the experience.
Yet Oratorio continues to
flourish, and Handel's "Messiah" to be the king
of all Oratorios.
One can hardly be blamed for concluding that
the spell of Oratorio is in great part due to the
extraordinary genius of him who mastered and
perfected that wonderful form and made it his
own. The idea of a grand musical work af-
fording full scope to the human voice in massed
chorus and in solo, to the organ, and to the
orchestra, treating a sacred theme, and using
words drawn from the Scriptures, is an idea
that, somehow or other, has taken deepest root
in English-speaking lands. Of all sacred Ora-
torios, Handel's "Messiah" is assuredly the
greatest; and Handel himself the representative
musician of Anglo-Saxondom.
Handel
Of course, it is the fashion to sneer at Han-
del these days; but those who have come to
scoff themselves remain to pray, when they
hear the thrilling measures of the Hallelujah
Chorus or the seven-fold Amen ringing through
the spaces from the mouths of half a thousand
singers.
It is a curious fact that, in spite of
almost complete neglect outside of his Oratorio
music, Handel continues to influence all music
most deeply and significantly. Why should we
think of him only as the writer of Oratorio?
For, after all, there is, even now, no composer
whose name is better known to the world at
large; while there is positively none whose man-
ner and matter alike appeal so aptly to the pe-
culiar genius of the Anglo-Saxon race. And
one may say that this includes Americans, for in
this day the once popular sneer of the wits is
shown up in all its foolishness, and we find
that the country whose tongue, whose laws,
whose government, whose political traditions are
all Anglo-Saxon may, in this solemn hour of
her history, indeed find it no disgrace to ac-
knowledge the source of her greatness.
A Contemporary
"It may sound like an anachronism," says
Haweis, in his famous essay on "Music and
Morals," "to call Handel a contemporary, and
yet he seems so constantly present with us that
at times we can hardly believe that he has passed
away. We are surrounded by his effigies, no
living face is more familiar—no modern min-
strel more beloved than he who has now quietly
lain in the great Abbey for some hundred and
ten years." Those years have lengthened to
one hundred and fifty-eight since the words were
written, but they are just as true now as they
were then. Modern fashions may come and go,
but the "Hallelujah Chorus," "Honor and
Arms," "Angels Ever Bright and Fair," "I Know
That My Redeemer Liveth," and other glorious
inspirations will be living and loved when the
names of all the neo-futuristic maniacs are
totally forgotten.
One may be accused of undue enthusiasm,
but perhaps the reader will excuse such a dis-
play in one who, though by mere coincidence,
can say that his family's home for many years
was the identical house in Brook street, London,
where the great master lived during the last
twenty years of his life and where in 1759 he
died, old and blind, but honored by the world
and most deeply loved by the English, amongst
whom he passed his best and most fruitful years.
The Adventurer
George Frederic Handel was a Saxon by birth,
having been born in the town of Halle in Feb-
ruary, 1685. His father was a physician in
moderate circumstances, who at first opposed
his son's choice of music as a profession and
was as much astonished as grieved at the evi-
dences of his talent. His career was among the
most adventurous and wholly erratic that the
world of music—itself erratic enough—has ever
known. Italy, Germany, England, in turn fur-
nished him a home. Beginning with the com-
position of Italian operas, or operas in the
dreadfully artificial style to which Italian mu-
sical art had sunk, he went through an amazing
series of adventures which culminated in his
famous Italian opera seasons in London. These,
for all their artistic success and for all the
immense amount of labor he expended on them,
being composer, sometimes librettist, manager,
treasurer and orchestra conductor all in one—
netted him nothing but bankruptcy; and it was
in the reaction from the latest of these finan-
cial depressions, during the year 1741, that the
idea of composing an Oratorio on the central
mystery of the Christian faith first came to him.
He had already made experiments, such as Saul
and Israel in Egypt; but he had not yet found
his true theme. This was to come.
The Dublin Visit
The Duke of Devonshire of that day had been
appointed Viceroy in Ireland and had invited
Handel over to Dublin to pay him a visit. A
society of musical amateurs in Dublin asked
him to compose for them some music to be
performed at a festival which was to be given
for the relief of "poor and distressed prisoners
for debt" who were confined in the city's
Marshalsea. Handel consented, and no less
than twelve performances of his various works
were given at short intervals, amidst scenes of
extraordinary enthusiasm. Yet all of these
were to pale before the blinding glory of the
climacteric "Messiah."
On April 13, 1742, at noon, the New Music
Hall, Fishamble street, was crowded to suffoca-
tion with an audience which represented all the
wealth, the beauty, and the musical culture of
the Irish capital. Mr. Handel's new Oratorio,
so ran the notices, composed in England spe-
cially for performance in Dublin, was to be
given its first performance. Public expectation
was at its height. The ladies had, in deference
to generally expressed wishes, actually left at
home their hooped petticoats and appeared in
skirts of normal width, dead against the fashion,
(Continued on page 10)
The Master Player-Piano
is now equipped with an
AUTOMATIC TRACKING DEVICE
Which guarantees absolutely correct tracking of even the most imperfect music rolls
WINTER & CO., 220 Southern Boulevard, New York City
Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
10
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
MUSICALLY SPEAKING
{Continued from page 9)
just in order that one hundred additional chairs
might be placed in the room and that much
more money be available for the poor prison-
ers. A deputation of the latter had free seats
in the gallery. Handel had given his services
free, and so had the chief singers, Mrs. Colley
Cibber, wife of the great actor, Mrs. Avolio,
Mr. Dubourg and others. The enthusiasm of
the audience increased almost to madness as
the successive glories of Handel's genius were
unfolded to their enraptured hearing. Ladies
wept and almost swooned, gentlemen of fashion
stamped and shouted, hysterically. One clergy-
man, mingling theological assurance with a de-
liciously national tendency to unconscious
humor, cried out to Mrs. Cibber, at the close of
one of her airs, "Woman, for this thy sins be
forgiven thee"; which must have both amused
and irritated that extremely virtuous lady.
In a word, the success was stupendous; and
it is quite gratifying to know that the poor
debtors profited to the extent of over £400.
Since that day Handel's "Messiah" has been
the one musical work which all the English-
speaking world has known, has fervently loved,
and has made its every own.
An Anglo-Saxon
Yet Handel, seemingly so English in spirit
and genius, was in fact a Saxon and to the end
of his life spoke with a marked accent. But in
truth he was as much Anglo-Saxon; and his
music speaks out that fine sturdy spirit of in-
dependence which, a century before that April
day in Dublin, had flamed out in the Great
Rebellion of 1642, had by legal process tried
and convicted a king for capital crimes in 1649,
and forty years later, when Handel was already
four years old, had forced the flight of the tyran-
nical James and seated William and Mary in
his place.
Handel is justly claimed by the
Anglo-Saxon world; and no more compelling
musical voice than his has yet spoken to that
world.
A Player-Piano Lock
It is an unfortunate fact that very little of
Handel's glorious music has been recorded for
the benefit of player-pianists. The catalogs
of the best publishers reveal a meager display.
The variations on an original theme, known gen-
erally by the name of "The Harmonious Black-
smith," head the list. These are taken from a
book of pieces for the harpsichord which is to
be found among Handel's lighter works. It
must be remembered then he was the greatest
organist and harpsichordist of his day, and his
virtuoso performances on the keyboard were
for long wholly unsurpassed.
Many small
pieces for the harpsichord, as well as some fine
concertos and fantasias for the organ, were
composed by him. It is too bad that there are
not more arranged for us player-pianists. "The
Harmonious Blacksmith" variations are simple
and quaint to modern ears, but charming to the
last degree.
We are more sophisticated in
these days; but that is not altogether a matter
for congratulation.
The famous Largo is in reality an air from one
of Handel's forgotten Italian-style operas. Its
solemn beat seems, to our ears, to indicate the
measured tread of a sacred procession; but it
was written for purely secular uses. It has
been arranged for organ, piano, orchestra great
and orchestra small, for violin with orchestra
and for violin with piano, for 'cello with or-
chestra and for 'cello with piano. Modern
words have been set to it. It has been played
by every instrument in the world save the
mandolin, one is inclined to think. There are
some good arrangements of it for the player-
piano and all should possess at least one of
these.
The glorious "Messiah" is represented in roll
catalogs by the Hallelujah chorus, and by the
lovely aria "He Shall Feed His Flock." In
the 65-note days one remembers that there were
many more good things. The Q R S catalog
of those days held the Overture with its grave
introduction and line fugue, the first recitative,
"Comfort Ye, My People," followed by the fine
air "Every Valley," the grand chorus "Lift Up
Your Heads, O! Ye Gates," and the splendid
bass solo, "Why Do the Nations so Furiously
Rage Together?" And there were others. Is
it not too bad that we have them no longer?
In addition to the above, there are some ac-
companiment rolls in the Aeolian catalog for
arias from the "Messiah." The famous Dead
March from the Oratorio "Saul" is still much
played and can also be had for player-piano. It
remain's a favorite for military bands on solemn
occasions.
The quantity of music for organ which Handel
left and which is still delightedly played by or-
ganists has not a single representative, so far
as the writer knows, in all the music roll cat-
alogs. Yet one of the best fields for player-
piano transcription is found in these wonder-
ful old organ works, as well as in those of the
mighty Bach and the polished Mendelssohn.
What a pity the publishers do not sometimes
give us a little more of them!
On Good Friday, April 13, 1759, the anniver-
sary date of the first performance seventeen
years before of the "Messiah," good Father
Handel, who had conducted a performance of
his greatest work seven days previously, quietly
passed away. It had been his wish to rest in
Westminster Abbey among the eminent men
whose services arc thus honored and their mem-
ory kept green by the people whom good
George Frederic Handel had learned to love,
with whom he had for so many years made his
home, and who had learned to love and honor
him in turn. That wish was gratified. Handel
sleeps in Britain's Pantheon; but his spirit is
still blessedly among us.
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