Filtering by Tag: #classical

Handel and Jennens

Added on by Craig Stewart.

George Frideric Handel composed his famous Messiah oratorio somewhere between three and four weeks in 1741. “He would literally write from morning to night,” says Sarah Bardwell of the Handel House Museum in London. The oratorio’s text was completed by well-known librettist, Charles Jennens and planned for an Easter performance the following year. “I hope [Handel] will lay out his whole Genius & Skill upon it, that the Composition may excel all his former Compositions, as the Subject excels every other Subject,” Jennens had written to a friend.

Although originally intended for Easter, it eventually became a Christmas favorite, mainly because Easter music was more prevalent at the time and the first part of Messiah was almost entirely dedicated to the birth of Christ.

Even Mozart paid homage to Handel, after re-orchestrating Messiah in 1789. He insisted that any alterations to Handel's score should not be interpreted as an effort to improve the music. “Handel knows better than any of us what will make an effect,” Mozart said. “When he chooses, he strikes like a thunderbolt.”

Antonio Lucio Vivaldi

Added on by Craig Stewart.

Originally ordained as an Italian priest in 1703, Antonio Lucio Vivaldi later became a prolific composer who created hundreds of works including Baroque concertos. In addition to composing, he was also known as a virtuoso violinist.

Vivaldi was given the title of Master of Violin at the Devout Hospital of Mercy (an orphanage) in Venice when he was only 25. Over the next 30 years, he would compose the majority of his most famous music while employed at a hospital teaching orphans. From his short-lived career as an ordained priest, to teaching orphans, to composing wedding music for emperors and kings, Vivaldi became one of the most influential musicians of his era.

One of my favorite Vivaldi recordings, Gloria in D Major comes from the RV 589 which includes Emma Kirkby & Catherine Bott & Judith Nelson & James Bowman & Carolyn Watkinson & Simon Standage & Catherine Mackintosh & Choir of Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford & The Academy of Ancient Music & Simon Preston & Christopher Hogwood. The sound quality on this version is superb for an almost 30 year span from the RV 588 original.

Sources: Biography + FactsKing

Sources: Biography + FactsKing

Bach

Added on by Craig Stewart.

Johann Sebastian Bach created this magnificent composition for the complete Roman Catholic service of a Latin Mass. It represents one of Bach’s last works and wasn’t fully completed until 1749, a year before his death. Bach’s Mass has become widely proclaimed as one of the greatest compositions in musical history, being performed and recorded many times over. So many, it’s recommended that a person sample several different recordings before making a purchase, just to decide which version they’d prefer.

Under Frans Brüggen’s direction, this particular recording from 2009, is my personal favorite. It has a quicker pace, as opposed to some of the earlier Baroque recordings. The vocals of Cappella Amsterdam are ethereally beautiful, while the Orchestra of the Eighteenth Century, founded by Frans Brüggen, provides a brightly dynamic sound to Bach’s masterful arrangement.

© Helpful Creative. All Rights Reserved.Sources: Wikipedia + Quora

© Helpful Creative. All Rights Reserved.

Sources: Wikipedia + Quora