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By George! Handel’s Music for Royal Occasions 7 February – 18 May 2014 Handel’s Music for Royal Occasions

Handel composed music for a wide range of occasions and patrons and contributed music to royal and State events for three British monarchs. Some of his earliest works with English ‘The main quality a composer must have in writing for royal occasions is a sense of theatre. text were performed before Queen Anne in 1713, only two years after Handel had settled in When Handel wrote his magnificent set of four for the of George II in 1727, . Handel used his German connections to his advantage when George I ascended he had already written twenty operas and was an experienced man of the theatre who could the throne in 1714, and benefited from Hanoverian royal patronage all his life. As well as set a mood in a few seconds, paint a drama, thrill an audience. the Priest, with its composing for State occasions, he taught the royal princesses, writing short pieces for them, throbbing suspense-building introduction and shattering choral entry, does all of that and more although he was never formally appointed as a court musician. The Coronation Anthems in the space of just six minutes. There are other messages in the Handel Coronation Anthems too. composed for George II in 1727 are perhaps the best known and most popular of Handel’s The music of all of them is confident and positive: the legitimacy of the Hanoverian monarchy, works for royal events; the four anthems include , which has been performed which Handel would have been eager to assert on the public stage of a great event, is left in at every British coronation since then. Other works for royal occasions include the Water no doubt. Handel was one of the two composers who, for me, best evoked the idea of kingship Music and Music for the Royal Fireworks. Handel’s last composition for a royal occasion was and pageantry in music – the other was . Crown Imperial and Henry V the The ways of Zion do mourn, for the funeral of Queen Caroline in 1737. created the whole royal sound world for the twentieth century.’

John Rutter (December, 2013)

John Rutter’s specially commissioned setting of Psalm 150 was performed at the Queen’s Golden Jubilee thanksgiving service in St Paul’s Cathedral in 2002. In 2011 he wrote a new anthem, “This is the day which the Lord hath made”, for the wedding ceremony of Prince William and Catherine Middleton at .

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Image on cover: Detail from A perspective view of the building for the fireworks in the Green Park. Handel. Mezzotint by Charles Turner (1773-1857) after Bartholomew Dandridge (1691-ca 1754) Robert Sayer, 1749 © The Gerald Coke Handel Foundation © Gerald Coke Handel Foundation to London 16 March 1734 The Daily Advertiser

Handel was employed as the court composer (Kapellmeister) to the Elector of Hanover The Nuptials of her Royal Highness the Princess Royal with the , was in June 1710, but spent much of his time in London, where he composed the birthday perform’d on Thursday last [14 March] … ode Eternal source of light divine for Queen Anne. On the death of the Queen in 1714 the The Lord Bishop of London, Dean of the Chapel, and the Lord Bishop of Winchester, Clerk Elector, although only 52nd in line to the British throne, succeeded to the title; under the of the Closet, stood before the Communion-table with Prayer-Books in their Hands; and after the Act of Succession which prohibited the from being a Catholic, he was the next in Organ had play’d some time, his Highness the Prince of Orange led the Princess Royal to the Rails of line to the throne. The new King, George I, travelled to London for his British coronation, the Altar, and kneel’d down, and then the Lord Bishop of London perform’d the Service; after which but he maintained a German-speaking court which gave Handel an advantage over many the Bride and Bridegroom arose, and retir’d to their Places, whilst a fine Anthem, compos’d by Mr. of his fellow musicians in London. Only days after his arrival, the King attended the Chapel Handell, was perform’d by a great Number of Voices and Instruments. … Royal and heard Handel’s , and Handel maintained a good relationship with his We are inform’d that their Highnesses the Prince and Princess of Orange will be at the former employer. Serenata this Evening, at the King’s Theatre in the Hay Market.

Queen Anne, ca 1710 Nuptia ceremoniales inter Annam, Mag; Brit; Principissam Regalem et Gugielum Principem Aransionensem. © The Gerald Coke Handel Foundation J. Rigaud: 1734. © City of London, London Metropolitan Archives Water Music Handel the tutor

Handel’s Water Music is a suite for orchestra composed for a party held on the River As a foreigner, Handel was not entitled to hold a court position, and he was appointed Thames for the King in 1717. Water parties were a relatively frequent event in this period ‘Composer to the ’ with a pension rather than a salary, composing only for – there are six royal water parties documented in 1715 alone – and could be used by the significant events. One duty which Handel did undertake, and for which he was paid £200 monarch to show himself to his people without too much formality. Handel’s suite of per annum, was teaching music to the royal princesses, Anne, Amelia, Carolina and Louisa. twenty-two pieces proved so agreeable to the King that he requested that it be played Anne, the Princess Royal, was a supporter of Handel and apparently the most musically three times during the evening. The King was in one barge and the orchestra in another, talented: it is recorded that Handel once said ‘nothing on earth could induce me to teach accompanied by further boats with members of the Court and guests. music, with one exception – Anne, the flower of princesses’.

The Establishment of their Royal Highnesses the Princess Royal, the Princess Amelia, and the Princess Carolina. … Per Ann. £. s. d. Dancing-Master, Mr. Anthony L’abbé – 240 0 0 Musick-Master, Mr. George-Frederic Handell 200 0 0

Payment records from John Chamberlayne’s Magnæ Britanniæ Notitia, 20 June 1728

Funeral music for Queen Caroline

King George II’s consort, Queen Caroline, died on 20 November 1737, and at the King’s request Handel composed the Funeral anthem The ways of Zion do mourn for the ceremony in Westminster Abbey on 17 December. The Queen had been a friend of Handel in Hanover, and was also an accomplished musician. The Duke of Chandos wrote that ‘the anthem took up three quarter of an hour of the time, of which the composition Londres. ca 1780 was exceeding fine, and adapted very properly to the melancholly of the occasion of it; © The Gerald Coke Handel Foundation but I can’t say so much of the performance’.

‘Next to the King’s barge was that of the musicians, about 50 in number, who played on all kinds of instruments, to wit trumpets, horns, hautboys, , German flutes, French flutes, violins and basses; but there were no singers.’

Report from Friedrich Bonet, the Prussian Resident, to Berlin, July 1717 Coronation Anthems

In 1727 George I died and his son was crowned George II in Westminster Abbey on 11 October 1727. The Norwich Mercury announced that ‘Mr Hendel’ had been appointed by the King to compose the music for the Coronation, and other newspapers describe large crowds gathering to hear the rehearsals of the music. The scale of the performance, with over 40 singers and about 160 in the orchestra, was unprecedented for such an event. Handel composed four Coronation Anthems, of which the most famous is Zadok the Priest; the text had been used at every coronation since King Edgar’s in 973, and Handel’s setting has been performed at every British coronation since 1727. During the prescribed ceremony all four anthems were to be performed, but, according to a copy of the 1727 service annotated by the Archbishop of Canterbury, the omitted one anthem and sang Zadok in its place by mistake.

‘Yesterday there was a Rehearsal of the Musick that is to be perform’d at their Majesties Coronation in Westminster Abbey, where was present the greatest Concourse of people that has ever been known.’

Read’s Weekly Journal, 7 October 1727

‘During the whole ceremony a band of the most skilful musicians, together with the finest voices in , sung admirable symphonies, conducted by the celebrated Mr. Handel, who had composed the Litany.’

Cesar de Saussure, letter to his family, 11 October 1727

Right: Coronation Anthem: Zadok the Priest. Copyist’s manuscript for the Earl of Shaftesbury: ca 1740 © The Gerald Coke Handel Foundation Music for the Royal Fireworks

In 1749 Britain was celebrating the end of the War of Austrian Succession, and a fireworks display was arranged in Green Park. Handel was commissioned to write music for the event, and a public rehearsal of the music at Vauxhall Gardens attracted thousands of people, reportedly causing a three-hour traffic jam of carriages. The event itself was less successful; one wing of the wooden structure devised by the theatre designer Giovanni Servandoni, which acted as a platform for the launch of the fireworks, caught fire. However, the music was performed successfully and the King watched the proceedings from the library at St James’s Palace.

An ‘account of the machine for firing the works’ and many images of the event were published. Handel’s music was composed for wind band; surviving correspondence records that the King wanted it to be composed for ‘martial instruments’ (wind, brass and percussion) but Handel overrode his wishes and included stringed instruments in his final score.

A perspective view of the magnificent structure erected in the Green Park. Robert Wilkinson, 1749 © The Gerald Coke Handel Foundation ‘Yesterday there was the brightest and most numerous Assembly ever known at the Spring Garden, Vauxhall; on Occasion of the Rehearsal of Mr. Handel’s Music, for the Royal Fire Works. Several Footmen who attended their Masters, &c. thither, behaved very sausily, and were justly corrected by the Gentlemen for their Insolence.’ ‘Handel’s royal and ceremonial music has stood the test of time because it does more than General Advertiser, 22 April 1749 just serve the occasions for which it was written – it’s memorable in its own right. We still whistle the tunes from the Water Music, thrill to the trumpets and drums of Zadok the Priest, tap our feet to the Fireworks Music.’

John Rutter (December, 2013) ‘Was performed, at Vauxhall Gardens, the rehearsal of the music for the fireworks, by a band of 100 musicians, to an audience of above 12,000 persons (tickets 2s. 6d.). So great a resort occasioned such a stoppage on London Bridge, that no carriage could pass for 3 hours.’

The Gentleman’s Magazine, April 1749 1685 – 1759

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