Manuscript page from Handel's "Hallelujah" Chorus. Photograph courtesy Lilly Library.
While Handel’s Messiah has become a Christmas tradition over the years, quite why it has is puzzling, since the oratorio, an assemblage of texts from the Bible, is focused primarily on the passion, death, and resurrection of Christ, making it generally more appropriate for Easter. However, a holiday tradition it is, so here are your options if you wish to hear Messiah this December. You never know—you could witness something along the lines of the most epic mistake ever heard in the Hallelujah chorus for your trouble.
Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, December 2 and 3, Meyerhoff Hall, Baltimore Edward Polochick conducts, with the Concert Artists of Baltimore Symphonic Chorale, and Karen Clift, Krisztina Szabó, Nicholas Phan, and Stephen Powell as soloists. It’s a fairly long trip from Washington, but the acoustics at the Meyerhoff are some of the best in the region. $20 to $65.
Choirs and Orchestra of Washington National Cathedral, December 2 through 4, National Cathedral Michael McCarthy conducts, with Gillian Keith, Marianne Beate Kielland, Rufus Müller, and Nathan Berg as soloists. This annual performance is generally quite beautiful, but the cavernous space of Washington National Cathedral can be less than satisfying for listening, generally getting worse the farther you’re seated from the performers. $25 to $85. National Philharmonic, December 10 and 11, Music Center at Strathmore Stan Engebretson conducts, with the National Philharmonic Chorale, and Jennifer Casey Cabot, Kendall Gladen, Matthew Smith, and Kevin Deas as soloists. This is a good option to introduce that young person in your life to Messiah, because those aged seven to 17 qualify for a free ticket when accompanied by an adult. $32 to $79.
National Symphony Orchestra, December 15 through 18, Kennedy Center Concert Hall Matthew Halls conducts, with the University of Maryland Concert Choir, and Kiera Duffy, Matthew Shaw (countertenor), James Gilchrist, and Neal Davies as soloists. The NSO generally offers the best performance in the area, highlighting different styles of interpretation each year. That means that in some years, like this one, you get a fairly generic version of the most overplayed oratorio of all. $20 to $85.
Some of those free performances encourage the audience to sing along; a few will even rent you a score for a small fee. Bigger sing-along performances of Messiah include the George Mason University Center for the Arts (December 11, $10) and the very popular free sing-along in the Kennedy Center Concert Hall, with the KC Opera House Orchestra (December 23). Tickets for the latter event will be distributed earlier in the day at the Kennedy Center.
Add one more, for a very good cause -- Owen Burdick will lead a period-instrument "Messiah" at the Church of Ascension and St. Agnes (http://www.ascensionandsaintagnes.org/), with the proceeds going to benefit the repairs of the earthquake-damaged organ.
December 18, 4 PM
1217 Mass Ave. NW
Posted by: Charles, Dec 07, 2011 03:46:51 PM
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