Overture Magazine - 2018-19 Season BSO_Overture_NOV_DEC | Page 31

HANDEL MESSIAH example: “Comfort Ye, My People” is an accompanied recitative and “Every Valley” is an aria. Perhaps the most stunning sequence in Part I is the juxtaposition of the bass soloist’s aria, “The people that walked in darkness,” with the beloved chorus, “For unto us a child is born.” In a marvelous example of musical text painting, the bass literally wanders in a chromatically confused maze in the dark key of B minor. The “great light” for which he yearns is then joyfully revealed in G major as the chorus salutes Jesus’ birth. All the choruses demonstrate Handel’s exhilarating technique of mixing powerful homophonic or chordal utterances (“Mighty! Counselor!”) with a more intricate polyphonic style in which each voice part pursues its own elaborately decorated line (“For unto us a child is born”). The origins of the ritual of standing for the “Hallelujah” Chorus are rather misty. Scholars believe that the Prince of Wales may have stood up when he attended that historic London performance in 1749. Certainly by 1780, everyone in the audience was following King George III’s lead in rising for Handel’s mighty hymn of praise. Perhaps even exceeding “Hallelujah” in majesty and joy is the magnificent chorus “Worthy is the Lamb” that closes Part III, the shortest of the three sections but also the one most densely packed with the oratorio’s greatest sequences (the soprano’s serenely beautiful statement of faith, “I Know that my Redeemer Liveth”; the bass’ hair-raising proclamation of the Final Judgment, based on First Corinthians, “The Trumpet Shall Sound,” with its glorious trumpet accompaniment). “Worthy is the Lamb” itself is capped with an “Amen” chorus on an epic scale worthy of the masterpiece it closes — unfurling in grand sweeps some of the finest, most inspired choral counterpoint this Baroque master ever devised. Instrumentation: Two oboes, bassoon, contrabassoon, two trumpets, timpani, 2018-19 SEASON SUPERPOPS CHRISTINA BIANCO WOMAN OF A THOUSAND VOICES THU, FEB 28 | 8 PM STRATHMORE FRI, MAR 1 | 8 PM MEYERHOFF SAT, MAR 2 | 8 PM MEYERHOFF SUN, MAR 3 | 3 PM MEYERHOFF JACK EVERLY, conductor CHRISTINA BIANCO, vocalist You'll think you're at a concert featuring Celine Dion, Julie Andrews, Bernadette Peters and more as actress, singer and impressionist Christina Bianco takes center stage with Jack Everly and the BSO SuperPops. Presenting Sponsors: BGE, An Exelon Company, Total Wine & More Supporting Sponsors: RBC Wealth Management, Lord Baltimore Hotel Media Partner: Baltimore Style harpsichord, organ and strings. Notes by Janet E. Bedell, © 201 8 TICKETS FROM $ 25 | BSOMUSIC.ORG | 410.783.8000 N OV– D EC 2018 / OV E R T U R E 29