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Most music lovers have encountered (George Frederick Handel} through
holiday-time renditions of the Messiah's "Hallelujah" chorus. And many of
them know and love that oratorio of Christ's life and death, as well as a
few other greatest hits like the orchestral Water Music and Royal
Fireworks Music, and perhaps Judas Maccabeus or one of the other English
oratorios. Yet his operas, for which he was widely known in his own time,
are the province mainly of specialists in Baroque music, and the events of
his life, even though they reflected some of the most important musical
issues of the day, have never become as familiar as the careers of Bach or
Mozart. Perhaps the single word that best describes his life and music is
"cosmopolitan": he was a German composer, trained in Italy, who spent most
of his life in England. Handel was born in the German city of Halle on
February 23, 1685. His father noted but did not nurture his musical
talent, and he had to sneak a small keyboard instrument into his attic to
practice. As a child he studied music with Friedrich Wilhelm Zachow,
organist at the Liebfrauenkirche, and for a time he seemed destined for a
career as a church organist himself. After studying law briefly at the
University of Halle, Handel began serving as organist on March 13, 1702,
at the Domkirche there. Dissatisfied, he took a post as violinist in the
Hamburg opera orchestra in 1703, and his frustration with musically
provincial northern Germany was perhaps shown when he fought a duel the
following year with the composer Matheson over the accompaniment to one of
Matheson's operas. In 1706 Handel took off for Italy, then the font of
operatic innovation, and mastered contemporary trends in Italian serious
opera. He returned to Germany to become court composer in Hannover, whose
rulers were linked by family ties with the British throne; his patron
there, the Elector of Hannover, became King George I of England. English
audiences took to his 1711 opera Rinaldo, and several years later Handel
jumped at the chance to move to England permanently. He impressed King
George early on with the Water Music of 1716, written as entertainment for
a royal boat outing. Through the 1720s Handel composed Italian operatic
masterpieces for London stages: Ottone, Serse (Xerxes), and other works
often based on classical stories. His popularity was dented, though, by
new English-language works of a less formal character, and in the 1730s
and 1740s Handel turned to the oratorio, a grand form that attracted
England's new middle-class audiences. Not only Messiah but also Israel in
Egypt, Samson, Saul, and many other works established him as a venerated
elder of English music. The oratorios displayed to maximum effect Handel's
melodic gift and the sense of timing he brought to big choral numbers.
Among the most popular of all the oratorios was Judas Maccabeus, composed
in 32 days in 1746. Handel presented the oratorio six times during its
first season and about 40 times before his death 12 years later,
conducting it 30 times himself. In 1737, Handel suffered a stroke, which
caused both temporary paralysis in his right arm and some loss of his
mental faculties, but he recovered sufficiently to carry on most normal
activity. He was urged to write an autobiography, but never did. Blind in
old age, he continued to compose. He died in London on April 14, 1759.
Beethoven thought Handel the greatest of all his predecessors; he once
said, "I would bare my head and kneel at his grave." ~ AMG, All Music
Guide