Messiah in Dublin

On 10th December last year I posted a review of a performance of Handel’s Messiah in Cardiff. At the end of that item I wondered where I would be listening to Messiah in 2018. Well, the answer to that question turned out to be at the National Concert Hall in Dublin, the city where Messiah received its premiere way back in 1742.

Messiah was initially performed at Easter (on 13th April 1742) and it’s by no means clear (to me) why it ended up almost universally regarded as a Christmas piece. The work actually spans the entire biblical story of the Messiah, from Old Testament prophecy to the Nativity (Part 1), the Passion of Christ (Part II), culminating in the Hallelujah Chorus, and the Resurrection of the Dead (Part III). The Nativity only features (briefly) in Part I, which is why it’s a little curious that Messiah is so strongly associated with Christmas.

The printed programme for last night (cover shown above) included the first advertisement for the first performance of Messiah:

For the relief of the prisoners in the several Gaols and for the Support of Mercer’s Hospital in Stephen’s Street and of the Charitable Infirmary on the Inn’s Quay, on Monday 12th April will be performed at the Musick Hall in Fishamble Street, Mr Handel’s new Grand Oratorio MESSIAH…

The venue was designed to hold 600 people (less than half the capacity of the National Concert Hall) but 700 people crammed in. Ladies had been asked not to wear hoops in their dresses and gentlemen were asked not to bring their swords to help squeeze in the extra hundred. The concert raised the huge sum of £400 and Messiah was an immediate hit in Ireland.

It wasn’t the same story when Messiah was first performed in England the following year. It failed again in England when performed in 1745 but after some rewriting Handel put it on again in 1749 and it proved an enormous success. It has remained popular ever since. But it is still exceptionally popular in Dublin. There are umpteen performances of Messiah at this time of year, and the one I attended last night was one of three in the same week at the same venue, all more-or-less sold out. The Dubliners I chatted to in the bar before the concert were extremely proud that their city is so strongly associated with this remarkable work.

I don’t mind admitting that Messiah is a piece that’s redolent with nostalgia for me. Some of the texts remind me a lot of Sunday School and singing in a church choir when I was little and then, a bit later, listening to the whole thing at Christmas time at the City Hall in Newcastle. I loved it then, and still do now, well over 40 years later. I know it’s possible to take nostalgia too far – nobody can afford to spend too much time living in the past – but I think it’s good to stay in contact with your memories and the things that shaped you when you were young.

Last night’s performance was by Our Lady’s Choral Society with the RTÉ Concert Orchestra. Soloists were Sarah Brady (soprano), Patricia Bardon (mezzo), Andrew Gavin (tenor) and Padraic Rowan (bass), the latter really coming into his own in the second half with a wonderfully woody sonority to his voice, especially in No. 40:

Why do the nations so furiously rage together, and why do the people imagine a vain thing?

Topical, or what?

Our Lady’s Choral Society is an amateur outfit and, while it might not sound as slick and polished as some professional choirs, there was an honesty about its performance last night that I found very engaging. It actually sounded like people singing, which professional choirs sometimes do not. The orchestra played very well too, and weren’t forced to use the dreaded `period instruments’. There was a harpsichord, but fortunately it was barely audible. Anyway, I enjoyed the concert very much and so did the packed house. I couldn’t stay for all the applause as I had dash off to get the last train back to Maynooth, but that doesn’t mean I didn’t appreciate the music.

Incidentally, among the bass section of Our Lady’s Choral Society last night was my colleague Brian Dolan. On Monday next I’m going to another Concert at the National Concert Hall, Bach’s Christmas Oratorio. Among the choir for that performance is another of my colleagues, Jonivar Skullerud. Obviously, choral singing is the in-thing for theoretical physicists in this part of the world!

11 Responses to “Messiah in Dublin”

  1. Anton Garrett Says:

    I’ll bet that the association with Christmas is Victorian. It is in the 19th century that Christmas celebrations became popular in the English-speaking world, for several reasons: the novelty of photographs of Queen Victoria and Albert celebrating it (given the innovation of prepaid stamps and the improved postal service due to railways, Christmas cards rapidly caught on); renewed Anglican ritualism promoted by the high-church ‘Oxford Movement’; and the huge popularity of Charles Dickens’ tale, A Christmas Carol.

    According to Wikipedia on Messiah, a “Great Handel Festival” was held at the Crystal Palace in 1857, while Victorian society was packed with choral societies that loved Handel.

    Put these two things together and you have it.

  2. I have always regarded Messiah as an Easter work. Maybe that’s because the Church traditions I have been involved with are far removed from the Oxford movement, but the whole narrative and structure of the piece leads towards Easter.

  3. I’ve played this countless times and never tire of it. However, I’m not mad about the acoustics in the NCH, on-stage or in the audience

    • telescoper Says:

      The acoustic is not as good as St David’s Hall in Cardiff but it’s not that bad. I asked Brian how it sounded to him, though, and he said it was very difficult to hear on stage. The choir was not in the balcony, incidentally, but on stage behind the Orchestra.

  4. Anton Garrett Says:

    One of the best review articles in my original field of physics was by Kailash Kumar, HR Skullerud and Bob Robson. While I was in Australia 1985-7 I met Kumar and Robson; would HR Skullerud be a relation of your colleague?

  5. Anton Garrett Says:

    Let’s not discuss science fiction on a thread about music.

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