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Messiah Part II

Messiah (HWV 56), the English-language oratorio composed by George Frideric Handel in 1741, is structured in three parts. This listing covers Part II in a table and comments on individual movements, reflecting the relation of the musical setting to the text. Part I begins with the prophecy of the Messiah and his birth, shows the annunciation to the shepherds and reflects the Messiah's deeds on earth. Part II covers the Passion in nine movements including the oratorio's longest movement, an air for alto He was despised, then mentions death, resurrection, ascension, and reflects the spreading of the Gospel and its rejection. The part is concluded by a scene called "God's Triumph" that culminates in the Hallelujah chorus. Part III of the oratorio concentrates on Paul's teaching of the resurrection of the dead and Christ's glorification in heaven.

Messiah
(Part II)
by George Frideric Handel
The last page of the Hallelujah chorus, ending Part II, in Handel's manuscript
Year1741 (1741)
PeriodBaroque
GenreOratorio
TextCharles Jennens, a compilation from the King James Bible and the Book of Common Prayer
Composed22 August 1741 (1741-08-22) – 14 September 1741 (1741-09-14): London
Movements23 in seven scenes
VocalSATB choir and solo
Instrumental

Messiah, the oratorio edit

 
Christopher Hogwood in rehearsal in 2014

The libretto by Charles Jennens is entirely drawn from the Bible, mostly from the King James Bible, whereas several psalms are taken from the Book of Common Prayer.[1][2] The librettist commented: "... the Subject excells every other Subject. The Subject is Messiah ...".[3] Messiah differs from Handel's other oratorios by telling no story, instead offering reflections on different aspects of the Christian Messiah. Christopher Hogwood comments:

Messiah is not a typical Handel oratorio; there are no named characters, as are usually found in Handel's setting of the Old Testament stories, possibly to avoid charges of blasphemy. It is a meditation rather than a drama of personalities, lyrical in method; the narration of the story is carried on by implication, and there is no dialogue.

Structure and concept edit

The oratorio's structure follows the liturgical year; Part I corresponding with Advent, Christmas and the life of Jesus, Part II with Lent, Easter, Ascension and Pentecost, Part III with the end of the church year, dealing with the end of time, the Resurrection of the dead and Christ's glorification in heaven. The sources are drawn mostly from the Old Testament.[2] Even the birth and death of Jesus are told in the words of the prophet Isaiah, the most prominent source of the libretto. The only true scene of the oratorio is taken from the Gospel of Luke, the annunciation to the shepherds.[5] The imagery of shepherd and lamb features prominently, in the aria "He shall feed His flock like a shepherd", the only extended piece to talk about the Messiah on earth, in the opening of Part II, "Behold the Lamb of God", in the chorus "All we like sheep", and in the closing chorus of the work, "Worthy is the Lamb". Occasionally verses from different biblical sources are combined in one movement, but more often a coherent text section is set in different consecutive movements, such as the first "scene", the annunciation of Christian salvation, as a sequence of three movements, recitative, aria and chorus.

Music edit

When Handel composed Messiah in London, he was already a successful and experienced composer of Italian operas. He had started in 1713 to also compose sacred music on English texts, such as the Utrecht Te Deum and Jubilate. He set many oratorios on English libretti. In Messiah he used practically the same musical means as for those works, namely a structure based on chorus and solo singing. Only a few movements are a duet or a combination of solo and chorus. The solos are typically a combination of recitative and aria. The arias are called Air or Song, some of them have da capo form, but rarely in a strict sense, repeating a first section after a sometimes contrasting middle section. Handel finds various ways to use the format freely, in order to convey the text. The movements marked "Recitative" (Rec.) are "secco", only accompanied by the basso continuo. Recitatives marked "Accompagnato" (Acc.) are accompanied by additional string instruments. Handel uses four voice parts in both solo and chorus, soprano (S), alto (A), tenor (T) and bass (B). Only once is the chorus divided in an upper chorus and a lower chorus, it is SATB otherwise. The orchestra scoring is simple: oboes, strings and basso continuo of harpsichord, violoncello, violone and bassoon. Two trumpets and timpani highlight selected movements, such as the closing movements of Part II, Hallelujah. Handel uses a cantus firmus on long repeated notes especially to illustrate God's speech and majesty, such as "King of Kings" in the Hallelujah chorus.[6]

General notes edit

The following table is organized by movement numbers. There are two major systems of numbering the movements of Messiah: the historic Novello edition of 1959 (which is based on earlier editions and contains 53 movements), and the Bärenreiter edition of 1965 in the Hallische Händel-Ausgabe. Not counting some short recitatives as separate movements, there are therefore 47 movements. In the table below, the Novello number (Nov) is given first and is the index for the notes to individual movements in the "movements" section, then the Bärenreiter number (Bär).

To emphasise the movements in which the oboes (ob) and the rarely used trumpets (tr) and timpani (ti) play, the summary below does not mention the regular basso continuo and the strings in movements. Details on the development of keys, different tempo markings times within a movement are given in notes on the individual movements.

Part II summary edit

Movements of Messiah Part II
Nov Bär Title / First line Form Tempo marking Scoring Time Key
22 19 Behold the Lamb of God Chorus Largo ob   G minor
23 20 He was despised Air, alto Largo   E-flat major
24 21 Surely, He hath borne our grieves Chorus Largo e staccato ob   A-flat major
25 22 And with His stripes we are healed Chorus Alla breve, moderato ob   F minor
26 23 All we like sheep Chorus Allegro moderato ob   F major
27 24 All they that see Him, laugh Accompagnato, tenor Larghetto   B-flat minor
28 25 He trusted in God Chorus Allegro ob   C minor
29 26 Thy rebuke hath broken His heart Accompagnato, Tenor Largo   various
30 27 Behold, and see Arioso, Tenor Largo e piano   E minor
31 28 He was cut off out Accompagnato, tenor or soprano   B minor
32 29 But Thou didst not leave his soul Air, tenor or soprano Andante larghetto   A major
33 30 Lift up your heads Chorus SSATB A tempo ordinario ob   F major
34 Unto which of the angels Recitative, tenor   D minor
35 31 Let all the angels of God Chorus Allegro ob   D major
36 32 Thou art gone up on high Air, alto, soprano, or bass Allegro larghetto 3/4 D minor (alto and bass) / G minor (soprano)
37 33 The Lord gave the word Chorus Andante allegro ob   B-flat major
38 34 How beautiful are the feet Duet, alto or soprano & alto Chorus or Air, soprano or alto Andante ob   D minor (duet and chorus) / G minor (soprano) / C minor (alto)
39 35 Their sound is gone out Arioso, tenor or chorus Andante larghetto   F major (tenor) / E-flat major (chorus)
40 36 Why do the nations so furiously rage Air, bass Allegro   C major
41 37 Let us break their bonds asunder Chorus Allegro e staccato ob 3/4 C major
42 He that dwelleth in heaven Recitative, Tenor   A major
43 38 Thou shalt break them Air, tenor Andante 3/4 A minor
44 39 Hallelujah Chorus Allegro tr ti ob   D major

Part II movements edit

Scene 1 edit

Scene 1 is the longest scene of the oratorio and reflects the Passion, in Jennens' words "Christ's Passion; the scourging and the agony on the cross", in nine individual movements, including the longest one, the Air for alto "He was despised".[3] Part II is the only part opened by a chorus, and continues to be dominated by choral singing. Block observes that the emphasis on the Passion differs from modern western popular Christianity, which prefers to stress the nativity of the Messiah.[4]

22 edit

Behold the Lamb of God

The opening chorus "Behold the Lamb of God" begins like a French overture in G minor, a key of "tragic presentiment", according to Christopher Hogwood.[7] The continuo drops an octave, then the violins rise an octave, to express "Behold". After only three instrumental measures the voices proclaim the Testimony of John the Baptist, John 1:29, which recalls Isaiah 53.[4] The alto begins, followed after half a measure each by the soprano, the bass, and finally the tenor. After the initial rise, the melody falls in dotted rhythms, but rises on "that taketh away the sin of the world". The melody shows similarity to the beginning of "He shall feed his flock", but "sharpened" from major to minor, from triplets to dotted rhythm, and by the octave leap in the beginning.

23 edit

 
Schmerzensmann, Albrecht Dürer

He was despised

The text in this movement comes from Isaiah's fourth song about the Man of Sorrows: "He was despised, rejected of men, a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief" (Isaiah 53:3), indicating that "the Messiah will play a substitutionary sacrificial role on behalf of his people".[4] Handel gives the pitiful description to the alto solo in the longest movement of the oratorio in terms of duration.[3] It is a da capo aria, showing two contrasting moods, set in E-flat major in the first section, C minor in the middle section. The vocal line begins with an ascending fourth on "he was" and adds another one on "despi-sed", ending as a sigh. The signal of a fourth has been observed by musicologist Rudolf Steglich as a unifying motif of the oratorio.[5] Handel breaks the beginning of the text up to a stammering "He was despised, – despised and rejected, – rejected of men, ... – despi-sed – rejected", the words interspersed with rests as long as the words, as if exhausted. Soft sighing motifs of the violins, an echo of the singing, drop into these rests. Hogwood interprets the unaccompanied passages as emphasizing "Christ's abandonment".[7] The middle section is also full of dramatic rests, but now the voice is set on a ceaseless agitated pattern of fast dotted notes in the instruments, illustrating the hits of the smiters in text from the third song (Isaiah 50:6), where the words appear in the first person: "He gave his back – to the smiters – ... and His cheeks – to them – that plucked off the hair. – He hid – not his face – from shame – and spitting."

24 edit

Surely, He hath borne our griefs

The dotted rhythm returns in instruments and voices in the chorus "Surely, He hath borne our griefs and carried our sorrows", the continuation of Isaiah's text, set in F minor. The chorus continues with the remainder of Isaiah 53:5 and ends on the words "the chastisement of our peace was upon him".

25 edit

And with His stripes we are healed

In the same key the chorus continues with a fugue "And with His stripes we are healed". The theme begins with a sequence of five long notes, which Mozart quoted in the Kyrie-fugue of his Requiem. The characteristic ascending fourth opens the countersubject. The word "healed" is later stressed by both long melismas and long notes.

26 edit

All we like sheep

Still continuing Isaiah's text, "All we like sheep, have gone astray" is set as a fast chorus in F-major on a walking bass with irregular patterns and leaps. The voices utter twice together "All we like sheep", then two voice parts move simultaneously in different directions on "have gone astray", with the last syllable extended to eleven notes. The next bit of the text "we have turned" is illustrated by fast coloraturas, lacking direction. In a dramatic sudden adagio, full of chromatic tension, the movement ends on "and the Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of us all". Myers comments about the chorus, which seems out of place at first sight: "In Handel's famous chorus sin glories in its shame with almost alcoholic exhilaration. His lost sheep meander hopelessly through a wealth of intricate semi quavers, stumbling over decorous roulades and falling into mazes of counterpoint that prove inextricable. A less dramatic composer than Handel would scarcely have rendered his solemn English text with such defiance, for the discrepancy between the self-accusing words and his vivacious music is patent to any listener emancipated from the lethargy of custom."[8] The movement is based on the final section of the duet for two sopranos "Nò, di voi non vo' fidarmi" (HWV 189, July 1741).[9]

27 edit

All they that see Him, laugh Him to scorn

The thought "All they that see Him, laugh Him to scorn" is taken from Psalm 22 (Psalms 22:7), the psalm from which Jesus quoted on the cross, according to Mark and Matthew. The text is set as a short tenor accompagnato, again based on a pattern of dotted notes in the instruments. The strings through in violent figures after "laugh Him to scorn" and "shoot out their lips", similar to an outburst of laughter. The key of B-flat minor is termed "remote and barbarous" by Hogwood.[7]

28 edit

He trusted in God, that He would deliver Him

What they say is given to the chorus as a strict fugue in C minor: "He trusted in God, that He would deliver Him, if He delight in Him." Jonathan Keates observes that Handel depicts the mocking, menacing crowd here, comparable to the turbae in Bach's Passions.[10]

29 edit

Thy rebuke hath broken His heart

The tenor returns to sing a verse of the Psalm 69: "Thy rebuke hath broken His heart" (Psalms 69:20). Aching chromatic chords picture the broken heart. The accompagnato begins in A-flat major, shifts without stability and ends in B major. The tenor voice, going to report death and resurrection in scene 2, is comparable to the Evangelist in the Passions of Bach.[10]

30 edit

Behold, and see if there be any sorrow

The tenor arioso "Behold, and see if there be any sorrow" (Lamentations 1:12) is based on text from the Book of Lamentations which is frequently associated with Good Friday, both Jesus and his mother Mary, although it originally lamented the destruction of Jerusalem. In the short movement in E minor, the accompaniment pauses rather regularly on the first and third beat of a measure.

Scene 2 edit

Scene 2 covers death and resurrection in two tenor solo movements.

31 edit

He was cut off out of the land of the living

In a restrained way, the death of the Messiah is told in another tenor accompagnato, as foretold by Isaiah, "He was cut off out of the land of the living" (Isaiah 53:8). Long chords begin in B minor and end in E major.

32 edit

But Thou didst not leave his soul in hell

His resurrection is again told by the tenor in an Air according to Psalm 16, "But Thou didst not leave his soul in hell" (Psalms 16:10).

Scene 3 edit

Scene 3 refers in a chorus to the ascension.

33 edit

Lift up your heads

"Lift up your heads" is a line from Psalm 24 (Psalms 24:7–10). Since the text has questions ("Who is the King of Glory?") and answers ("He is the King of Glory"), Handel divides the choir in the first section to a high, announcing group (sopranos I and II, alto) and a low, questioning group (alto, tenor, bass).

Scene 4 edit

Scene 4 covers the Messiah's position in heaven, following the teaching from the Epistle to the Hebrews in two verses, Hebrews 1:5–6.

34 edit

Unto which of the angels said he at any time

In a short recitative the tenor renders the first verse, quoting Hebrews (Hebrews 1:5), "Unto which of the angels said he at any time", about the Messiah as the begotten Son of God.

35 edit

Let all the angels of God worship Him

The second verse "Let all the angels of God worship Him" (Hebrews 1:6) is a festive chorus in D major.

Scene 5 edit

Scene 5 alludes to Pentecost and the beginning of preaching the Gospel.

36 edit

Thou art gone up on high

Pentecost is referred to rather indirectly, without naming the Holy Spirit. "Thou art gone up on high" from Psalm 68 (Psalms 68:18) reflects "gifts for men" and "that God might dwell among them", expressed in swinging 3/4 time. Originally written for bass, Handel rewrote the Air in London in 1750 for the castrato Gaetano Guadagni.[10] However, the earlier editions (Novello, Best and Prout) all give this air to the Bass, in D minor; the current Novello edition by Watkins Shaw, as well as the Bäreneiter edition by John Tobin and the CF Peters edition by Donald Burrows all give the air to Alto (in D minor), and they provide transpositions for Soprano and Bass as well.

37 edit

The Lord gave the word

The thoughts are continued in an earlier verse from the same psalm (Psalms 68:11) as a chorus in B-flat major. "The Lord gave the word" is sung by just two voice parts, "Great was the company of the preachers" expanded for four parts with long coloraturas on "company".

38 edit

How beautiful are the feet of Him

The preachers are described tenderly in a duet in D minor and 3/4 time, as written first by Isaiah (Isaiah 52:7) and quoted by Paul in his Epistle to the Romans (Romans 10:15: "How beautiful are the feet of Him". Two alto voices begin and are joined by the choir, stressing "good tidings", "break forth into joy" and culminating on a cantus firmus of one repeated note: "Thy God reigneth!" Block, quoting Genesis 18:2, reflects that you see the feet of a messenger if you "fall prostrate before a superior. In the Bible, when people are confronted by a heavenly messenger (angel) the natural response is to fall down on one's face before the messenger."[4] Handel's original version, a duet in D minor for two altos and chorus or soprano, alto and chorus, was later rewritten by him in 1749 as an aria for soprano in G minor and 12/8 time and in 1750 transposed for alto in C minor.

39 edit

Their sound is gone out into all lands

Based on a number of Bible references, a tenor arioso describes the preachers further: "Their sound is gone out into all lands" (Romans 10:18, Psalms 19:4). In another Handel's version (so called version B), which is commonly preferred by performers now, the same text is set to new music and scored for chorus.

Scene 6 edit

Scene 6 shows the difficulties and rejection of the preaching, based on four consecutive verses from Psalm 2, Psalms 2:1–4. It is the first text in the oratorio actually referring to the Messiah, the "anointed one" (verse 2).[4]

40 edit

Why do the nations so furiously rage together

An Air for bass in C major, accompanied by an orchestra in continuous motion, tells of the difficulties. "Why do the nations so furiously rage together". Several terms, such as "Rage", are expressed by long melismas in triplets. Handel originally wrote a long 96-bar version of this air, skipping the da capo repeat. In an alternate version, he removed the last 58 bars and replaced them with a recitative setting of the second verse of the scripture.

41 edit

Let us break their bonds asunder

The choir continues the thought; the intention "Let us break their bonds asunder" is expressed in a fast succession of entries of the voices.

42 edit

He that dwelleth in heaven

The text continues in a short tenor recitative: "He that dwelleth in heaven".

Scene 7 edit

Scene 7 is called "God's triumph" by Jennens.

43 edit

Thou shalt break them with a rod of iron

A forceful Air for tenor tells of God's power against enemies, again taken from Psalm 2: "Thou shalt break them with a rod of iron" (Psalms 2:9).

44 edit

Hallelujah

Part II closes with the Hallelujah chorus which became famous as a stand-alone piece, set in the key of D major with trumpets and timpani. The choir introduces Hallelujah, repeated in homophony, in a characteristic simple motif for the word, playing with the interval of a second, which re-appears throughout the piece. Several lines from the Book of Revelation (Revelation 19:6,16, Revelation 11:15) are treated differently, as in a motet, but unified by "Hallelujah" as a conclusion or as a countersubject in a fugal section. The line "for the Lord God omnipotent reigneth" is sung by all voices, first in unison, then in imitation with Hallelujah-exclamations interspersed. The second line "The kingdom of this world is become" is sung in a four-part setting like a chorale. The third idea "and He shall reign for ever and ever" starts as a fugue on a theme with bold leaps, reminiscent in sequence of Philipp Nicolai's Lutheran chorale "Wachet auf".[7] As a countersubject, the words "for ever – and ever" assume the rhythm of the Hallelujah-motif. The final acclamation "King of Kings...and Lord of Lords" is sung on one note, energized by repeated calls Hallelujah and "for ever – and ever", raised higher and higher in the sopranos and trumpets, up to a rest full of tension and a final solemn Hallelujah.

References edit

  1. ^ Vickers, David (2012). . gfhandel.org. Archived from the original on 8 September 2012. Retrieved 7 February 2013.
  2. ^ a b Powell, David R. (2009). . journal.atla.com. Theological Librarianship, An Online Journal of the American Theological Library Association. Archived from the original on 5 March 2012. Retrieved 8 July 2011.
  3. ^ a b c Heighes, Simon (1997). "George Frideric Handel (1685–1759) / Messiah – Simon Heighes, for The Sixteen recording, Ach Herr, mich armen Sünder". hyperion-records.co.uk. Retrieved 11 July 2011.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Block, Daniel I. (2001). "Handel's Messiah: Biblical and Theological Perspectives" (PDF). Didaskalia. 12 (2). Retrieved 19 July 2011.
  5. ^ a b Luckett, Richard (1992). Handel's Messiah: A Celebration. London: Victor Gollancz. ISBN 978-0-575-05286-4.
  6. ^ Burrows, Donald (1991). Handel: Messiah. Cambridge (UK): Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-37620-4.
  7. ^ a b c d Hogwood, Christopher (1991). Handel: Messiah (CD). The Decca Recording Company Ltd. (Notes on the music, Edition de L'Oiseau-Lyre 430 488–2)
  8. ^ Manson Myers, Robert (1948). Handel's Messiah: A Touchstone of Taste. New York: Macmillan. ISBN 9780374960353.
  9. ^ . GFHandel.org. Archived from the original on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 19 July 2011.
  10. ^ a b c Keates, Jonathan (2007). (PDF). Barbican Centre. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 October 2012. Retrieved 27 July 2011.

External links edit

messiah, part, messiah, english, language, oratorio, composed, george, frideric, handel, 1741, structured, three, parts, this, listing, covers, part, table, comments, individual, movements, reflecting, relation, musical, setting, text, part, begins, with, prop. Messiah HWV 56 the English language oratorio composed by George Frideric Handel in 1741 is structured in three parts This listing covers Part II in a table and comments on individual movements reflecting the relation of the musical setting to the text Part I begins with the prophecy of the Messiah and his birth shows the annunciation to the shepherds and reflects the Messiah s deeds on earth Part II covers the Passion in nine movements including the oratorio s longest movement an air for alto He was despised then mentions death resurrection ascension and reflects the spreading of the Gospel and its rejection The part is concluded by a scene called God s Triumph that culminates in the Hallelujah chorus Part III of the oratorio concentrates on Paul s teaching of the resurrection of the dead and Christ s glorification in heaven Messiah Part II by George Frideric HandelThe last page of the Hallelujah chorus ending Part II in Handel s manuscriptYear1741 1741 PeriodBaroqueGenreOratorioTextCharles Jennens a compilation from the King James Bible and the Book of Common PrayerComposed22 August 1741 1741 08 22 14 September 1741 1741 09 14 LondonMovements23 in seven scenesVocalSATB choir and soloInstrumental2 trumpets timpani 2 oboes 2 violins viola basso continuo Contents 1 Messiah the oratorio 1 1 Structure and concept 1 2 Music 1 3 General notes 2 Part II summary 3 Part II movements 3 1 Scene 1 3 1 1 22 3 1 2 23 3 1 3 24 3 1 4 25 3 1 5 26 3 1 6 27 3 1 7 28 3 1 8 29 3 1 9 30 3 2 Scene 2 3 2 1 31 3 2 2 32 3 3 Scene 3 3 3 1 33 3 4 Scene 4 3 4 1 34 3 4 2 35 3 5 Scene 5 3 5 1 36 3 5 2 37 3 5 3 38 3 5 4 39 3 6 Scene 6 3 6 1 40 3 6 2 41 3 6 3 42 3 7 Scene 7 3 7 1 43 3 7 2 44 4 References 5 External linksMessiah the oratorio edit nbsp Christopher Hogwood in rehearsal in 2014The libretto by Charles Jennens is entirely drawn from the Bible mostly from the King James Bible whereas several psalms are taken from the Book of Common Prayer 1 2 The librettist commented the Subject excells every other Subject The Subject is Messiah 3 Messiah differs from Handel s other oratorios by telling no story instead offering reflections on different aspects of the Christian Messiah Christopher Hogwood comments Messiah is not a typical Handel oratorio there are no named characters as are usually found in Handel s setting of the Old Testament stories possibly to avoid charges of blasphemy It is a meditation rather than a drama of personalities lyrical in method the narration of the story is carried on by implication and there is no dialogue Christopher Hogwood 4 Structure and concept edit Main article Structure of Handel s Messiah The oratorio s structure follows the liturgical year Part I corresponding with Advent Christmas and the life of Jesus Part II with Lent Easter Ascension and Pentecost Part III with the end of the church year dealing with the end of time the Resurrection of the dead and Christ s glorification in heaven The sources are drawn mostly from the Old Testament 2 Even the birth and death of Jesus are told in the words of the prophet Isaiah the most prominent source of the libretto The only true scene of the oratorio is taken from the Gospel of Luke the annunciation to the shepherds 5 The imagery of shepherd and lamb features prominently in the aria He shall feed His flock like a shepherd the only extended piece to talk about the Messiah on earth in the opening of Part II Behold the Lamb of God in the chorus All we like sheep and in the closing chorus of the work Worthy is the Lamb Occasionally verses from different biblical sources are combined in one movement but more often a coherent text section is set in different consecutive movements such as the first scene the annunciation of Christian salvation as a sequence of three movements recitative aria and chorus Music edit When Handel composed Messiah in London he was already a successful and experienced composer of Italian operas He had started in 1713 to also compose sacred music on English texts such as the Utrecht Te Deum and Jubilate He set many oratorios on English libretti In Messiah he used practically the same musical means as for those works namely a structure based on chorus and solo singing Only a few movements are a duet or a combination of solo and chorus The solos are typically a combination of recitative and aria The arias are called Air or Song some of them have da capo form but rarely in a strict sense repeating a first section after a sometimes contrasting middle section Handel finds various ways to use the format freely in order to convey the text The movements marked Recitative Rec are secco only accompanied by the basso continuo Recitatives marked Accompagnato Acc are accompanied by additional string instruments Handel uses four voice parts in both solo and chorus soprano S alto A tenor T and bass B Only once is the chorus divided in an upper chorus and a lower chorus it is SATB otherwise The orchestra scoring is simple oboes strings and basso continuo of harpsichord violoncello violone and bassoon Two trumpets and timpani highlight selected movements such as the closing movements of Part II Hallelujah Handel uses a cantus firmus on long repeated notes especially to illustrate God s speech and majesty such as King of Kings in the Hallelujah chorus 6 General notes edit The following table is organized by movement numbers There are two major systems of numbering the movements of Messiah the historic Novello edition of 1959 which is based on earlier editions and contains 53 movements and the Barenreiter edition of 1965 in the Hallische Handel Ausgabe Not counting some short recitatives as separate movements there are therefore 47 movements In the table below the Novello number Nov is given first and is the index for the notes to individual movements in the movements section then the Barenreiter number Bar To emphasise the movements in which the oboes ob and the rarely used trumpets tr and timpani ti play the summary below does not mention the regular basso continuo and the strings in movements Details on the development of keys different tempo markings times within a movement are given in notes on the individual movements Part II summary editMovements of Messiah Part II Nov Bar Title First line Form Tempo marking Scoring Time Key22 19 Behold the Lamb of God Chorus Largo ob nbsp G minor23 20 He was despised Air alto Largo nbsp E flat major24 21 Surely He hath borne our grieves Chorus Largo e staccato ob nbsp A flat major25 22 And with His stripes we are healed Chorus Alla breve moderato ob nbsp F minor26 23 All we like sheep Chorus Allegro moderato ob nbsp F major27 24 All they that see Him laugh Accompagnato tenor Larghetto nbsp B flat minor28 25 He trusted in God Chorus Allegro ob nbsp C minor29 26 Thy rebuke hath broken His heart Accompagnato Tenor Largo nbsp various30 27 Behold and see Arioso Tenor Largo e piano nbsp E minor31 28 He was cut off out Accompagnato tenor or soprano nbsp B minor32 29 But Thou didst not leave his soul Air tenor or soprano Andante larghetto nbsp A major33 30 Lift up your heads Chorus SSATB A tempo ordinario ob nbsp F major34 Unto which of the angels Recitative tenor nbsp D minor35 31 Let all the angels of God Chorus Allegro ob nbsp D major36 32 Thou art gone up on high Air alto soprano or bass Allegro larghetto 3 4 D minor alto and bass G minor soprano 37 33 The Lord gave the word Chorus Andante allegro ob nbsp B flat major38 34 How beautiful are the feet Duet alto or soprano amp alto Chorus or Air soprano or alto Andante ob nbsp D minor duet and chorus G minor soprano C minor alto 39 35 Their sound is gone out Arioso tenor or chorus Andante larghetto nbsp F major tenor E flat major chorus 40 36 Why do the nations so furiously rage Air bass Allegro nbsp C major41 37 Let us break their bonds asunder Chorus Allegro e staccato ob 3 4 C major42 He that dwelleth in heaven Recitative Tenor nbsp A major43 38 Thou shalt break them Air tenor Andante 3 4 A minor44 39 Hallelujah Chorus Allegro tr ti ob nbsp D majorPart II movements editScene 1 edit Scene 1 is the longest scene of the oratorio and reflects the Passion in Jennens words Christ s Passion the scourging and the agony on the cross in nine individual movements including the longest one the Air for alto He was despised 3 Part II is the only part opened by a chorus and continues to be dominated by choral singing Block observes that the emphasis on the Passion differs from modern western popular Christianity which prefers to stress the nativity of the Messiah 4 22 edit Behold the Lamb of God source source Problems playing this file See media help Behold the Lamb of GodThe opening chorus Behold the Lamb of God begins like a French overture in G minor a key of tragic presentiment according to Christopher Hogwood 7 The continuo drops an octave then the violins rise an octave to express Behold After only three instrumental measures the voices proclaim the Testimony of John the Baptist John 1 29 which recalls Isaiah 53 4 The alto begins followed after half a measure each by the soprano the bass and finally the tenor After the initial rise the melody falls in dotted rhythms but rises on that taketh away the sin of the world The melody shows similarity to the beginning of He shall feed his flock but sharpened from major to minor from triplets to dotted rhythm and by the octave leap in the beginning 23 edit nbsp Schmerzensmann Albrecht DurerHe was despised He was despised 8 47 source source The text in this movement comes from Isaiah s fourth song about the Man of Sorrows He was despised rejected of men a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief Isaiah 53 3 indicating that the Messiah will play a substitutionary sacrificial role on behalf of his people 4 Handel gives the pitiful description to the alto solo in the longest movement of the oratorio in terms of duration 3 It is a da capo aria showing two contrasting moods set in E flat major in the first section C minor in the middle section The vocal line begins with an ascending fourth on he was and adds another one on despi sed ending as a sigh The signal of a fourth has been observed by musicologist Rudolf Steglich as a unifying motif of the oratorio 5 Handel breaks the beginning of the text up to a stammering He was despised despised and rejected rejected of men despi sed rejected the words interspersed with rests as long as the words as if exhausted Soft sighing motifs of the violins an echo of the singing drop into these rests Hogwood interprets the unaccompanied passages as emphasizing Christ s abandonment 7 The middle section is also full of dramatic rests but now the voice is set on a ceaseless agitated pattern of fast dotted notes in the instruments illustrating the hits of the smiters in text from the third song Isaiah 50 6 where the words appear in the first person He gave his back to the smiters and His cheeks to them that plucked off the hair He hid not his face from shame and spitting 24 edit Surely he hath borne our griefs source source Surely He hath borne our griefsThe dotted rhythm returns in instruments and voices in the chorus Surely He hath borne our griefs and carried our sorrows the continuation of Isaiah s text set in F minor The chorus continues with the remainder of Isaiah 53 5 and ends on the words the chastisement of our peace was upon him 25 edit And with his stripes source source And with His stripes we are healedIn the same key the chorus continues with a fugue And with His stripes we are healed The theme begins with a sequence of five long notes which Mozart quoted in the Kyrie fugue of his Requiem The characteristic ascending fourth opens the countersubject The word healed is later stressed by both long melismas and long notes 26 edit All we like sheep source source All we like sheepStill continuing Isaiah s text All we like sheep have gone astray is set as a fast chorus in F major on a walking bass with irregular patterns and leaps The voices utter twice together All we like sheep then two voice parts move simultaneously in different directions on have gone astray with the last syllable extended to eleven notes The next bit of the text we have turned is illustrated by fast coloraturas lacking direction In a dramatic sudden adagio full of chromatic tension the movement ends on and the Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of us all Myers comments about the chorus which seems out of place at first sight In Handel s famous chorus sin glories in its shame with almost alcoholic exhilaration His lost sheep meander hopelessly through a wealth of intricate semi quavers stumbling over decorous roulades and falling into mazes of counterpoint that prove inextricable A less dramatic composer than Handel would scarcely have rendered his solemn English text with such defiance for the discrepancy between the self accusing words and his vivacious music is patent to any listener emancipated from the lethargy of custom 8 The movement is based on the final section of the duet for two sopranos No di voi non vo fidarmi HWV 189 July 1741 9 27 edit All they that see Him laugh Him to scornThe thought All they that see Him laugh Him to scorn is taken from Psalm 22 Psalms 22 7 the psalm from which Jesus quoted on the cross according to Mark and Matthew The text is set as a short tenor accompagnato again based on a pattern of dotted notes in the instruments The strings through in violent figures after laugh Him to scorn and shoot out their lips similar to an outburst of laughter The key of B flat minor is termed remote and barbarous by Hogwood 7 28 edit He trusted in god source source He trusted in God that He would deliver HimWhat they say is given to the chorus as a strict fugue in C minor He trusted in God that He would deliver Him if He delight in Him Jonathan Keates observes that Handel depicts the mocking menacing crowd here comparable to the turbae in Bach s Passions 10 29 edit Thy rebuke hath broken his heart source source Thy rebuke hath broken His heartThe tenor returns to sing a verse of the Psalm 69 Thy rebuke hath broken His heart Psalms 69 20 Aching chromatic chords picture the broken heart The accompagnato begins in A flat major shifts without stability and ends in B major The tenor voice going to report death and resurrection in scene 2 is comparable to the Evangelist in the Passions of Bach 10 30 edit Behold and see source source Behold and see if there be any sorrowThe tenor arioso Behold and see if there be any sorrow Lamentations 1 12 is based on text from the Book of Lamentations which is frequently associated with Good Friday both Jesus and his mother Mary although it originally lamented the destruction of Jerusalem In the short movement in E minor the accompaniment pauses rather regularly on the first and third beat of a measure Scene 2 edit Scene 2 covers death and resurrection in two tenor solo movements 31 edit He was cut off source source He was cut off out of the land of the livingIn a restrained way the death of the Messiah is told in another tenor accompagnato as foretold by Isaiah He was cut off out of the land of the living Isaiah 53 8 Long chords begin in B minor and end in E major 32 edit But thou didst not leave 1 32 source source But Thou didst not leave his soul in hellHis resurrection is again told by the tenor in an Air according to Psalm 16 But Thou didst not leave his soul in hell Psalms 16 10 Scene 3 edit Scene 3 refers in a chorus to the ascension 33 edit Lift up ye heads o ye gates source source Lift up your heads Lift up your heads is a line from Psalm 24 Psalms 24 7 10 Since the text has questions Who is the King of Glory and answers He is the King of Glory Handel divides the choir in the first section to a high announcing group sopranos I and II alto and a low questioning group alto tenor bass Scene 4 edit Scene 4 covers the Messiah s position in heaven following the teaching from the Epistle to the Hebrews in two verses Hebrews 1 5 6 34 edit Unto which of the angels source source Unto which of the angels said he at any timeIn a short recitative the tenor renders the first verse quoting Hebrews Hebrews 1 5 Unto which of the angels said he at any time about the Messiah as the begotten Son of God 35 edit Let all the angels of god worship him source source Let all the angels of God worship HimThe second verse Let all the angels of God worship Him Hebrews 1 6 is a festive chorus in D major Scene 5 edit Scene 5 alludes to Pentecost and the beginning of preaching the Gospel 36 edit Thou art gone up on high source source Thou art gone up on highPentecost is referred to rather indirectly without naming the Holy Spirit Thou art gone up on high from Psalm 68 Psalms 68 18 reflects gifts for men and that God might dwell among them expressed in swinging 3 4 time Originally written for bass Handel rewrote the Air in London in 1750 for the castrato Gaetano Guadagni 10 However the earlier editions Novello Best and Prout all give this air to the Bass in D minor the current Novello edition by Watkins Shaw as well as the Bareneiter edition by John Tobin and the CF Peters edition by Donald Burrows all give the air to Alto in D minor and they provide transpositions for Soprano and Bass as well 37 edit The lord gave the word source source The Lord gave the wordThe thoughts are continued in an earlier verse from the same psalm Psalms 68 11 as a chorus in B flat major The Lord gave the word is sung by just two voice parts Great was the company of the preachers expanded for four parts with long coloraturas on company 38 edit How beautiful are the feet source source How beautiful are the feet of HimThe preachers are described tenderly in a duet in D minor and 3 4 time as written first by Isaiah Isaiah 52 7 and quoted by Paul in his Epistle to the Romans Romans 10 15 How beautiful are the feet of Him Two alto voices begin and are joined by the choir stressing good tidings break forth into joy and culminating on a cantus firmus of one repeated note Thy God reigneth Block quoting Genesis 18 2 reflects that you see the feet of a messenger if you fall prostrate before a superior In the Bible when people are confronted by a heavenly messenger angel the natural response is to fall down on one s face before the messenger 4 Handel s original version a duet in D minor for two altos and chorus or soprano alto and chorus was later rewritten by him in 1749 as an aria for soprano in G minor and 12 8 time and in 1750 transposed for alto in C minor 39 edit Their sound is gone out source source Their sound is gone out into all landsBased on a number of Bible references a tenor arioso describes the preachers further Their sound is gone out into all lands Romans 10 18 Psalms 19 4 In another Handel s version so called version B which is commonly preferred by performers now the same text is set to new music and scored for chorus Scene 6 edit Scene 6 shows the difficulties and rejection of the preaching based on four consecutive verses from Psalm 2 Psalms 2 1 4 It is the first text in the oratorio actually referring to the Messiah the anointed one verse 2 4 40 edit Why do the nations source source Why do the nations so furiously rage togetherAn Air for bass in C major accompanied by an orchestra in continuous motion tells of the difficulties Why do the nations so furiously rage together Several terms such as Rage are expressed by long melismas in triplets Handel originally wrote a long 96 bar version of this air skipping the da capo repeat In an alternate version he removed the last 58 bars and replaced them with a recitative setting of the second verse of the scripture 41 edit Let us break their bonds asunder source source Let us break their bonds asunderThe choir continues the thought the intention Let us break their bonds asunder is expressed in a fast succession of entries of the voices 42 edit He that dwelleth in heaven source source He that dwelleth in heavenThe text continues in a short tenor recitative He that dwelleth in heaven Scene 7 edit Scene 7 is called God s triumph by Jennens 43 edit Thou shalt break them source source Thou shalt break them with a rod of ironA forceful Air for tenor tells of God s power against enemies again taken from Psalm 2 Thou shalt break them with a rod of iron Psalms 2 9 44 edit Hallelujah source source track All performed by MIT Concert Choir directed by William C Cutter HallelujahPart II closes with the Hallelujah chorus which became famous as a stand alone piece set in the key of D major with trumpets and timpani The choir introduces Hallelujah repeated in homophony in a characteristic simple motif for the word playing with the interval of a second which re appears throughout the piece Several lines from the Book of Revelation Revelation 19 6 16 Revelation 11 15 are treated differently as in a motet but unified by Hallelujah as a conclusion or as a countersubject in a fugal section The line for the Lord God omnipotent reigneth is sung by all voices first in unison then in imitation with Hallelujah exclamations interspersed The second line The kingdom of this world is become is sung in a four part setting like a chorale The third idea and He shall reign for ever and ever starts as a fugue on a theme with bold leaps reminiscent in sequence of Philipp Nicolai s Lutheran chorale Wachet auf 7 As a countersubject the words for ever and ever assume the rhythm of the Hallelujah motif The final acclamation King of Kings and Lord of Lords is sung on one note energized by repeated calls Hallelujah and for ever and ever raised higher and higher in the sopranos and trumpets up to a rest full of tension and a final solemn Hallelujah References edit Vickers David 2012 Messiah HWV 56 A Sacred Oratorio gfhandel org Archived from the original on 8 September 2012 Retrieved 7 February 2013 a b Powell David R 2009 The Bible and Handel s Messiah Some Sources on Their Relation and Use journal atla com Theological Librarianship An Online Journal of the American Theological Library Association Archived from the original on 5 March 2012 Retrieved 8 July 2011 a b c Heighes Simon 1997 George Frideric Handel 1685 1759 Messiah Simon Heighes for The Sixteen recording Ach Herr mich armen Sunder hyperion records co uk Retrieved 11 July 2011 a b c d e f Block Daniel I 2001 Handel s Messiah Biblical and Theological Perspectives PDF Didaskalia 12 2 Retrieved 19 July 2011 a b Luckett Richard 1992 Handel s Messiah A Celebration London Victor Gollancz ISBN 978 0 575 05286 4 Burrows Donald 1991 Handel Messiah Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 37620 4 a b c d Hogwood Christopher 1991 Handel Messiah CD The Decca Recording Company Ltd Notes on the music Edition de L Oiseau Lyre 430 488 2 Manson Myers Robert 1948 Handel s Messiah A Touchstone of Taste New York Macmillan ISBN 9780374960353 G F Handel s Compositions HWV 101 200 GFHandel org Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 19 July 2011 a b c Keates Jonathan 2007 Handel Messiah PDF Barbican Centre Archived from the original PDF on 5 October 2012 Retrieved 27 July 2011 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Messiah nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Messiah oratorio Messiah Handel at Curlie Messiah Handel Scores at the International Music Score Library Project Georg Friedrich Handel Messiah 1742 A Sacred Oratorio Words by Charles Jennens opera stanford edu George Frideric Handel 1685 1759 Messiah Simon Heighes for The Sixteen recording 1997 Handel Messiah Lindsay Kemp program notes for Colin Davis recording 2006 Portal nbsp Classical music Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Messiah Part II amp oldid 1172994494 44, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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