America's Messiah

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America's Messiah

Jerry Blackstone conducts Messiah at the University of Michigan

For musicians, Christmas means Messiah. This is not a comment upon musicians' religiosity, but rather upon their finances. Messiah, Handel's Messiah, is to America's choral societies and orchestras what La Bohème is to its opera houses and Nutcracker to its ballets: the guaranteed full house that can bankroll a whole season of deficits. Between Thanksgiving and New Year's, Handel's oratorio receives hundreds of performances, from church choirs with organ accompaniment to major symphonies with their professional choruses. With over sixty recorded versions available, classic sections of music stores become at Christmas little more than appendages to tables stacked with Messiahs: early music versions, Mozart's reorchestrated version, Shaw's, Pinnock's, Marriner's. The “ChristianContemporary music” crowd has even cashed-in with a pop version called “The Young Messiah” (a version that has roughly the same regard for the original as Attila the Hun had for historic preservation). The Lord Jesus may have had many things to say about mammon, but at Christmas at least, Messiah pays, and pays well. But why, from Bangor to San Diego, do average Americans who would otherwise not listen to a note of classical music year after year make performances of this oratorio sellouts? Why do they go? And what is the effect of Messiah‘s popularity upon our musical


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