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    December 1, 2007

    The M-Word: Messiah, If You Must

    Handel Monument, Westminster Abbey After yesterday's preview of the endless list of holiday concerts in the area in December, it is time to discuss the piece that must not be named, Georg Friedrich Händel's Messiah (1742). Yes, it is a masterpiece of music history, but the lamentable annual round of weary performances at Christmas time (in spite of the fact that Messiah is an Easter work), makes me want to run screaming for anything else this time of year. For some people, it is just not the Holiday Season without attending a performance of Messiah, which is why in Washington, as in many cities, no weekend in December and almost no day up through Christmas Eve will be without a performance of Messiah. Some will be better than others, of course: if you must, here are some suggestions.

    THE BEST:
    >> The only thing that really justifies yet another performance of this grossly overexposed work is an approach that is new and inventive. Enter the always innovative American Opera Theater, an experimental opera company based in Baltimore, which is offering a staged production of Messiah. As part of its new residency at Georgetown University, director Timothy Nelson has created a narrative of staged action that will unfold along with the musical performance. The musical quality will be good, and the idea of refashioning something so familiar by means of a new narrative is exciting. According to their advance materials, with this production American Opera Theater "peers through Messiah to look at the questions of being human at the beginning of the new millennium." Tickets: $15 to $30. December 7 to 9, Davis Arts Center.

    >> The most pleasing traditional performance this year is likely to be the one offered by the Choirs and Orchestra of Washington National Cathedral. In particular, the soprano soloist, Susan Lewis, has a voice worth hearing. December 7, 7:30 p.m.; December 9, 4 p.m.

    THE REST:
    >> The Baltimore Symphony Orchestra will present Messiah twice this year, once at Meyerhoff Symphony Hall in Baltimore (December 7, 7:30 p.m.) and once closer to Washington in the Music Center at Strathmore (December 8, 8 p.m.).

    >> As always, one of the last versions of Messiah is the one with the highest profile, presented by the National Symphony Orchestra in the Kennedy Center Concert Hall, with the University of Maryland Concert Choir. The Web site's little blurb brilliantly encapsulates the problem for musicians in playing the same work over and over, saying that Messiah is "performed each year with a fresh perspective by the NSO and acclaimed guest artists." If you really want a fresh perspective, maybe performing something else every other year would be a good idea. Tickets: $20 to $80 ($10 tickets for students, through the Attend! program, for some performances). December 20 to 23.

    >> The National Philharmonic will also cash in on Messiah, of course, in the Music Center at Strathmore. Tickets: $29 to $79 (children ages 7 to 17 free when accompanied by an adult). December 22 and 23.

    >> If you want to sing Messiah yourself, there are a surprising number of singalong performances, too. At most of them you can bring along your own score or rent one there. The big one of these is hosted by the Kennedy Center in the Concert Hall (December 9, 2 p.m.), about which more later. However, many churches in the area also have Messiah singalongs, and this article in the Washington Post lists several of them, as well as a few more regional options to get that "fresh perspective" on this favorite — or dreaded — work.


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    Comments (5)

    Aww, why you gotta hate on the Messiah? It's just blasphemous...figuratively and literally...

     

    Look, I love Handel and Messiah is a brilliant work. It has its problems, most notably because Handel was not very good at setting English to music, which shows in some of the parts of Messiah that he adapted from earlier music he composed for Italian texts (a language he set much more naturally). Even the greatest piece of music would get dull as a result of mind-numbing repetition. All I'm saying is: can't we give the piece a rest? Is there nothing else that could get performed in December? Please?

     


    Blasphemous? try the Northwestern University’s Kazoo Choir.

    I know there are better versions by Barbara Stewart's Kazoophony and others, but I couldn't find them online.

     

    The link above has an extra slash in it and does not work properly, but the video is something you must watch:

    Hallelujah Chorus on Kazoos

    Thanks, Mike!

     

    Ha! I sang in the opera chorus in Tulsa before I moved here. After too many long rehearsals of Aïda somebody got the brilliant idea to get a kazoo for every chorus member. During the piano tech rehearsal, we all whipped out our concealed kazoos for the triumphal march. The company's artistic director, Carol Crawford, was conducting the opera, and thus the rehearsal. Not only did she not miss a beat (ISTR the rehearsal accompanist had a bit of a breakdown, though), she made us repeat the entire march for the full orchestra during the sitzprobe. I'm pretty sure Carol (who just resigned, coincidentally) would have had words with any other conductor who wanted to use union time that way, but she seemed to think that it was worth it.

     
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