George Frideric
Handel had a remarkable life. Even as a teenager he was famous in
Saxony in the region of his native town of Halle, with Georg Philipp
Telemann making a journey to meet the famous teenager. The famous
teenager then moved to Italy where in his early 20s he poured out
music of astonishing quality (and quantity). In 1708 at the age
of 23 he was found in Naples, presenting his cantata a tre
Aci, Galatea e Polifemo which was, in effect, a mini-opera (a
little like Purcell's Dido and Aeneas). The “cantata” is
packed with marvellous music, much of which Handel, an inveterate
cut-and-paste artist who wasted little, mined in later years for
other works after he had moved to England for the third phase of his
extraordinary life. Later in England he returned to the story to
write Acis and Galatea which, however, used little of the
music of the Neapolitan work.
As always with Handel,
performances need first-class singers and a first-class band. The
performance I have just listened to well meets all the requirements,
with Sandrine Piau sounding like a Stradivari violin, Sara Mingardo
like a Stradivari viola, and Laurent Naouri providing the villain's
bass voice. The ever-reliable Emmanuelle Haïm directs Le Concert
d'Astrée (2002). Arias such as Aci's Qui l'augel da pianta in
pianta (with oboe and violin obbligato) must have left Neapolitan
aficionados open-mouthed (Handel, of course, re-used the aria's music later in other works). A good Handel performance of a superb
Handel work leaves me happy. It is now over 330 years since Handel's
birth in Halle, but his music is still going strong as it undoubtedly
will for another 330. Handel died a rich man, because he wrote music
people liked and valued. Had he had the royalties from his music over
the past 300 years, he would have been even richer, since his
reputation is still going strong.
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