George Frideric Handel (1685-1759)
Ode for St Cecilia's Day
Georg Friedrich Handel, later more generally known under the
English forms of name that he assumed in London, George Frideric Handel, was
born in Halle in 1685, the son of a successful barber-surgeon and his much
younger, second wife. His father opposed his son's early musical ambitions and
after his father's death Handel duly entered the University in Halle in 1702 as
a student of law, as his father had insisted. He was able to seize the chance
of employment as organist at the Calvinist Cathedral the following month,
holding the position for a year, until his departure for Hamburg, to work there
at the opera, at first as a violinist and then as harpsichordist and composer,
contributing in the latter capacity to the Italian operatic repertoire of the
house. At the invitation of the son of the Medici Grand Duke of Tuscany, he
travelled, in 1706, to Italy, where he won considerable success during the next
four years. Connections he had made in Venice, brought appointment in 1710 as
Kapellmeister to the Elector of Hanover. From here he was granted immediate
leave to fulfil a commission in London.
Handel's first opera for London was Rinaldo, with which he
won general acclaim, and after little over a year in Hanover again, he returned
to England in the autumn of 1712. The following year he took up residence at
Burlington House in Piccadilly as a guest of Lord Burlington. After a brief
return to Germany in the summer of 1716, Handel returned to England, joining
the establishment of James Brydges, Earl of Carnarvon and later Duke of
Chandos, at Cannons, near Edgware. Principally, over the following years,
Handel established himself as a composer of Italian opera, for which there was
a fashionable audience, gradually achieving a dominant position in the musical
life of the English capital. He enjoyed the royal patronage of George I,
Elector of Hanover, who had succeeded to the English throne in 1715, on the
death of Queen Anne, and on the death of the former in 1727 was commissioned to
provide anthems for the coronation of George II. In the following years he was
again called upon to provide music for royal occasions. At the same time his
involvement with Italian opera brought increasing commercial difficulties,
particularly after the establishment of a rival opera company in 1733 under the
patronage of Frederick, Prince of Wales, himself later a strong supporter of
Handel.
While Handel's work in Italian opera continued, with a final
opera to be staged in 1741, he increasingly turned his attention to a new
English form, that of the oratorio. This had certain very practical advantages,
in language, lack of the need for expensive spectacle and the increasing
employment of native singers. The content of oratorios appealed to English
Protestant susceptibilities, providing a winning synthesis of religion and
entertainment, and offering no offence to those who had found operatic
conventions ridiculous in a city with strong pre-existent dramatic traditions.
Handel's first English oratorio, in 1732, was Esther, with a libretto based on
Racine, followed, in 1733, by the biblical Deborah in March and in July
Athalia. During the following years he continued to develop the form, chiefly
on biblical subjects but with an occasional excursion into the mythological.
These works, with their Italianate melodies, strong choral writing and
demonstrable dramatic sense, ensured their composer's continued popularity and
dominance, particularly, after his death, with the wider development of choral
singing in the nineteenth century.
Handel died in London in April 1759 and was buried, as he
had requested, in Westminster Abbey, to be commemorated there three years later
by an imaginative and slightly improbable monument by Louis François Roubiliac,
who had provided, thirty years before, a statue of the composer for the
pleasure gardens at Vauxhall, represented in his night-cap and slippers, in the
guise of Apollo, an indication of his popular reputation. His funeral drew a
crowd of some three thousand mourners, while posthumous Handel celebrations could
muster a similar audience in the Abbey, with a proportionate number of
performers.
Handel's setting of John Dryden's 1687 Ode for St Cecilia's
Day was first performed in 1739 at the Theatre Royal in Lincoln's Inn Fields on
the appropriate feast day, 22nd November. Included in the advertised programme
were Alexander's Feast, an earlier setting of Dryden's 1697 celebration of St
Cecilia, two new concertos for several instruments and a concerto on the organ.
The same announcement in the London Daily Post and General Advertiser, assures
patrons that 'Particular Care has been taken to have the House well-air'd; and
the Passage from the Fields to the House will be cover'd for better
Conveniency'. An earlier advertisement of the event had brought the assurance
that the house would be 'warm'd', something that was very necessary in a
particularly cold winter, when the Thames was frozen. The time was
unpropitious, as conflict had broken out with Spain in the so-called War of
Jenkins Ear, and public attention was drawn to that, while significant
spectacle in London was limited. Nevertheless there were further performances
during the season and further assurances of the necessary heating, with
'constant Fires ... kept in the House 'till the Time of Performance'. The singers
for whom Handel wrote were the French soprano Elisabeth Duparc, known as La
Francesina, who became increasingly associated with Handel performances over
the years, and the English tenor John Beard, who had worked with Handel since
1734.
The Ode for St Cecilia's Day opens with a French Overture,
introduced by ceremonial dotted rhythms, leading to a lively fugal section and
a Minuet. The text that follows, in praise of music, offers many chances of
word-painting, exploited by Handel in a work that draws to some extent on
Gottlieb Muffat's Componimenti Musicali per il Cembalo for material that is
then transformed, applied to its new purpose. A brief unaccompanied tenor
recitative introduces the more extended accompanied recitative of When Nature
underneath a heap / Of jarring atoms lay, with harmonies that follow the
imagery. The chorus takes up the opening text, while Handel seizes the
opportunity to provide ascending vocal and descending instrumental scales to
illustrate the words Through all the compass of the notes it ran, before
concluding with the more sonorous The diapason closing full in Man.
The air What passion cannot Music raise and quell? employs a
solo cello, matching the text of the soprano solo When Jubal struck the chorded
shell, in a G major saraband. A solo trumpet starts The trumpet's loud
clangour, a D major movement in which the tenor soloist evokes the mortal
alarms of war, while The double double beat / Of the thund'ring drum, echoes
musically and verbally Purcell and Dryden's King Arthur. The chorus adds
further strength to the suggestion of warfare, leading, naturally, to a March.
The following B minor soprano air, The soft complaining
flute, finds a natural place for flute and lute, the instruments mentioned in
the verse, its delicate sentiments translated aptly into instrumental terms. To
this the tenor adds the A major Sharp violins proclaim / Their jealous pangs.
There is immediate contrast in the following F major soprano air But oh! what
art can teach, / What human voice can reach / The sacred organ's praise?, a
movement provided with an organ obbligato that allowed Handel a chance of
further improvisation in performance. The soprano continues with the D minor
Orpheus could lead the savage race, a hornpipe in the marked rhythm associated
with that English dance. The soprano introduces the saint herself and the
harmony of the spheres, her phrases answered by the chorus, before the final
fugal climax of the work.
Keith Anderson
[1] Overture
[2] Interlude
[3] Recitative
(Tenor)
From
harmony, from Heav'nly harmony
This
universal frame began.
When
Nature underneath a heap
Of
jarring atoms lay,
And
could not heave her head,
The
tuneful voice was heard from high,
"Arise
ye more than dead!":
Then
cold, and hot, and moist, and dry,
In
order to their stations leap,
And
music's pow'r obey.
[4] Chorus
From
harmony, from Heav'nly harmony
This
universal frame began:
From
harmony to harmony
Through
all the compass of the notes it ran,
The
diapason closing full in man.
[5] Air
(Soprano)
What
passion cannot music raise and quell!
When
Jubal struck the corded shell,
His
list'ning brethren stood around
And
wond'ring, on their faces fell
To
worship that celestial sound:
Less
than a god they thought there could not dwell
Within
the hollow of that shell
That
spoke so sweetly and so well.
What
passion cannot music raise and quell!
[6] Air
and chorus (Tenor)
The
trumpet's loud clangour
Excites
us to arms
With
shrill notes of anger
And
mortal alarms.
The
double double double beat
Of
the thund'ring drum
Cries,
hark the foes come;
Charge,
charge, 'tis too late to retreat.
[7] March
[8] Air
(Soprano)
The
soft complaining flute
In
dying notes discovers
The
woes of hopeless lovers,
Whose
dirge is whisper'd by the warbling lute.
[9] Air
(Tenor)
Sharp
violins proclaim
Their
jealous pangs, and desperation,
Fury,
frantic indignation,
Depth
of pains and height of passion,
For
the fair, disdainful dame.
[10] Air
(Soprano)
But
oh! what art can teach
What
human voice can reach
The
sacred organ's praise?
Notes
inspiring holy love,
Notes
that wing their Heav'nly ways
To
mend the choirs above.
[11] Air
(Soprano)
Orpheus
could lead the savage race;
And
trees unrooted left their place;
Sequacious
of the lyre:
[12] Recitative
(Soprano)
But
bright Cecilia rais'd the wonder high'r;
When
to her organ, vocal breath was giv'n,
An
angel heard, and straight appear'd
Mistaking
earth for Heav'n.
[13] Air
and Chorus
As
from the pow'r of sacred lays
The
spheres began to move,
And
sung the great Creator's praise
To
all the bless'd above;
So
when the last and dreadful hour
This
crumbling pageant shall devour,
The
trumpet shall be heard on high,
The
dead shall live, the living die,
And
music shall untune the sky.
John Dryden (1631-1700)