656. How Handel Got His Mojo Back

656. 如何让亨德尔重获魔力

Freakonomics Radio

2025-12-12

57 分钟
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When he wrote Messiah (in 24 days), Handel was past his prime and nearly broke. One night in Dublin changed all that. (Part two of “Making Messiah.”)   SOURCES:Charles King, political scientist at Georgetown University.Chris Scobie, curator of music, manuscripts, and archives at the British Library.Ellen Harris, musicologist and professor emeritus at MIT.Mark Risinger, teacher at St. Bernard's School.Philip Rushforth, organist and master of the choristers at the Chester Cathedral.Proinnsías Ó Duinn, conductor and music director of Our Lady's Choral Society.  RESOURCES:Every Valley: The Desperate Lives and Troubled Times That Made Handel's Messiah, by Charles King (2024)."Arnaud du Sarrat and the international music trade in Halle and Leipzig c.1700," by Tomasz Górny (Early Music, 2023).George Frideric Handel: A Life with Friends, by Ellen Harris (2014).Handel (Composers Across Cultures), by Donald Burrows (2012)."Georg Händel (1622–97): The Barber-Surgeon Father of George Frideric Handel (1685–1759)," by Aileen Adams and B. Hofestädt (Journal Of Medical Biography, 2005).Handel's Messiah: A Celebration: A Richly Illustrated History of the Music and Its Eighteenth-Century Background, by Richard Luckett (1995).Handel's Messiah The Advent Calendar, podcast series. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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  • In part one of the series, we visited Dublin,

  • the unlikely site of George Friedrich Handel's first performance of Messiah.

  • I say unlikely because Handel lived in London, the capital of the music world.

  • Dublin was far away and relatively provincial.

  • And Handel was a longtime superstar,

  • hugely popular as both composer and performer with a royal patronage on the side.

  • So why did he decide to go all the way to Dublin to put on a series of concerts?

  • Well, because they asked, and importantly, they offered to pay.

  • The Irish would cover all his expenses,

  • and Handel would get a cut of the ticket sales, except, interestingly, for Messiah.

  • That was the one new composition he was bringing to Dublin,

  • and it would be performed as a charity event.

  • In any case, in November of 1741, an aging and not very healthy handle left for Dublin.

  • The first leg of the trip would take several days,

  • traveling by horse-drawn coach up to Chester, an old city in the north of England.

  • From there, he would take a shorter coach ride up to a ferry port on the English coast.

  • The ferry would take another day or three,

  • depending on the wind, to get across the Irish Sea to Dublin.

  • But his trip didn't go exactly as planned.

  • When he arrived in Chester,