Speranza
Giorgio Frederico Handel wrote over 100 cantatas, compositions for voice and instruments that
describe the joy and pain of love.
In "Handel as Orpheus", the first comprehensive
study of the cantatas, E. Harris investigates their place in Handel's life as
well as their extraordinary beauty.
The cantatas were written between 1706
and 1723--from the time Handel left his home in Germany, through the years he
spent in Florence and Rome, and into the early part of his London career.
In
this period he lived as a guest in aristocratic homes, and composed these
chamber works for his patrons and hosts, primarily for private entertainments.
In both Italy and England his patrons moved in circles in which same-sex desire
was commonplace--a fact that is not without significance, Harris reveals, for
the cantatas exhibit a clear homosexual subtext.
Addressing questions about
style and form, dating, the relation of music to text, rhythmic and tonal
devices, and voicing, Handel as Orpheus is an invaluable resource for the study
and enjoyment of the cantatas, which have too long been neglected.
This
innovative study brings greater understanding of Handel, especially his
development as a composer, and new insight into the role of sexuality in
artistic expression.
Harris (music and
theater arts, MIT) has written numerous scholarly studies on Handel's music.
Here, she restricts herself to a discussion of his chamber cantatas from a
social point of view, exposing the exclusive and secret homosexual society in
which they were created.
The compositions were written during a 17-year period
(1706-23) when Handel lived in the homes of aristocratic patrons, first in Italy
and then in England.
Harris concentrates on the texts, including for
the first time complete translations of all 67, and discusses them in terms of
their classical meanings, social context, and secret codes and private
references.
Though well written and extremely interesting, this study is not for
the casual reader.
The essay includes extensive musical and textual analysis and
requires some background in 18th-century social and music history.
Suitable for
large public and academic libraries.
This book deserves
triple applause: first for revealing a shockingly neglected portion of Handel
repertoire--nearly a hundred cantatas, almost all overlooked--secondly for
opening the door to the social and sexual context of this writing, and
revealing, if not Handel's private life, at least the surrounding atmosphere and
mores of his aristocratic patrons; and thirdly for enlivening it with the true
enthusiasm of a musician as well as a musicologist.
In this
soberly provocative study, Ellen Harris compels us to rethink how we understand
the relation between sexuality and the music of one of the most significant
composers in the Western classical tradition. Handel as Orpheus is
exciting.
A
remarkable achievement. Handel as Orpheus is a thorough study of Handel's
chamber cantatas that situates the works within their social and cultural
context.
Handel's cantatas are arguably his most important works from the point
of view of his development as a composer.
Harris shows how Handel's stylistic
development can be viewed in terms of his changing response to the ideas and
interests of his patrons.
Harris has written numerous scholarly studies on Handel's
music.
Here, she restricts herself to a discussion of his chamber cantatas from
a social point of view, exposing the exclusive and secret homosexual society in
which they were created...Though well written and extremely interesting, this
study is not for the casual reader; it includes extensive musical and textual
analysis and requires some background in 18th-century social and music history.
Suitable for large public and academic libraries.
Could George Frideric Handel have been gay?
And if so, what, if
anything, would that tell us about the music he wrote?
These questions--equally
challenging in their respective ways--have been around for a while, generally at
the fringes of musical scholarship.
Now they have been raised with fresh urgency
by a provocative new book, Handel as Orpheus.
This book is both the first comprehensive musicological
study of Handel's cantatas and a homosexual interpretation of their texts and
music, reflecting the same-sex activities of the aristocratic circles in which
Handel worked.
Offering a well-rounded view of the cantatas, she presents a
thoroughly documented case for interpreting the encoding and restraint used to
veil same-sex meanings, while meticulously presenting alternative or multiple
interpretations and other historical information.
At the core of Handel as Orpheus is a study of Handel's continuo and
instrumental cantatas, a subject Ellen Harris embarked on over 25 years ago.
Marshalling the results of archival and manuscript research as well as her own
musical and literary analyses, Harris offers a contextual interpretation of the
cantatas and their musical development; grouping Handel's cantatas by time and
place of composition, she explores the characteristics of each
period.
A comfortingly humane work of
scholarship. The topic of Handel's sexuality--very much germane to the Italian
cantatas that are Ms. Harris's principle concern--is addressed with candor and
sympathy. We come closer to the composer, partly by feeling the shape of
doubt.
Ellen Harris demonstrates in
this magnificent book how, on the one hand, not all the meanings of texts will
submit to the authors' control (this I had expected), but also, on the other,
how a meaning imparted by an author may be "true to life" insofar as it is
concealed. This I had not expected to work so well: to have traced the author's
voice in his musical as well as his biographical silences is an achievement for
which Ellen Harris should be envied.
-If you can't
read musical notation, if you don't understand talk about chord progressions and
deceptive cadences, this book will not be of interest to you.
You may be tempted
to try to read it by hearing that it discusses the vexed and vexing question of
Handel's sexuality, but that discussion amounts to 5% of the whole contents.
Even the social history portion of the text, investigating the homoerotically
charged ambience of Handel's circles of patrons in Roma, Firenze, and Londra,
takes up no more than 15% of the book.
"Handel as Orpheus" is an earnestly
scholarly inventory of Handel's cantatas, attempting to fix their dates and
provenance, providing full translations of them, spotlighting determinable
personal allusions in those texts, analyzing their musical structures and the
patterns of change they reveal in Handel's evolving style, fitting them into the
general drift of musical styles in the early decades of the 18th Century as well
as into the shifting paradigm of taste from the flamboyant Baroque to the
baroque of the Age of Enlightenment.
In short, this is a book that will
be of great interest to musicologists, cultural historians interested in music,
and concert performers of the Handelian repertoire, and of no interest to anyone
else.
If you just want to find out whether Handel was "gay", the best I can do
for you is to report that it's open to surmise. Oh, and to say "it really
doesn't matter."
This excellent book
is vast and touches on many subjects; it is definitely a fruit of many years
work and contemplation on the subject; yet because of its volume, I will review
only a few points that for me seemed the most interesting.
My advice to the
readers is to study first Handel's cantatas prior to reading this book, and a
few operas and oratorios mentioned; notably Acis and Galatea, Agrippina,
Orlando, Hercules, Lucrezia and Esther.
It was amazing to discover that
Handel borrowed so much from other composers, especially from his teacher
Reinhart Keiser.
Handel seems to favor the character of Agrippina - he already
used Keiser's music for his own "Ogni vento" in "Agrippina" and the same tune in
"Fiamma bella" in "Aminta e Fillide" cantata.
We learn on p.235 that Polyphemus
aria "O Ruddier that the cherry" incorporates Agrippina music from Keiser's
opera "Janus".
The book is full of other incredible parallels, extremely
interesting to learn.
The book provides very informative insights on the
homosexuality in England and protestant Europe and the changing attitudes from
1690s to 1730s with connection to anti-Catholicism.
One never realized that
persecution of homosexuals in non-catholic countries was another form of
protestant fighting with presumably corrupted Catholicism.
This idea projects on
modernity, when thinking that raising acceptance of homosexuality in America
coincided with raise in Catholic influence.
Next, I was astonished to
find a homoerotic interpretation of Acis and Galatea opera.
I have two
recordings and I had read their booklets in detail, but such an interpretation
was never mentioned.
The author opens us to the homosexual reading of this whole
opera, where Acis and Galatea are a pair of same-sex male lovers, while
Polyphemus may represent the "monstrous" law condemning men convicted of
same-sex acts to death; but even more stunning is an idea that Polyphemus could
actually represent an abandoned vengeful woman in the Acis-Galatea love
triangle, and that in England witches traditionally sang in basso voice.
Then the book speaks at length about the character of an "abandoned
woman" and her voice; those are represented by characters as Alcina,
Armida,
Melissa and Agrippina.
The author says that they normally represent female
irrationality and its contagious nature to men in love with such women.
However
with the cross-dressing door opened by the author, one can go further and
question if these women are actually women; using the author's own innovative
approach, we can speculate that these abandoned women may represent forbidden
illicit homosexual male lovers, who must be abandoned, as Alcina is abandoned by
Ruggiero, for the sake of lawful, socially approved life, love and marriage.
The
point is that with the cross-dressing interpretation introduced, it becomes very
difficult, if not impossible, to truly decide which character represents Handel
himself and his own view on sexuality.
I think the author gives a very
good hint when she mentions that Handel was a German expatriate in Italy and
England.
A devout Lutheran in Catholic and then Anglican countries; an artist
living through the system of patronage, thus catering to the tastes of his
patrons within the boundaries of his own inspiration.
To me, he seems to had
been successfully adjusting to the tastes of his patrons, and if his Italian
padrone were full of homoerotic ideas, he amply supplied for that.
Then, as if
tired of that (Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni, for example, was a highly debauched
character, yet Handel wrote many cantatas for him), he moved to England and his
stories changed, again according to the political climate and the inclinations
of his current admirers and supporters.
We must not forget that he was also a
very successful businessman and judging by the result, i.e. that Handel
accumulated a huge fortune and died a very wealthy man, buried with the most
pomp in Westminster Abbey, it is obvious that he had never put his private
sentimentality or passions above his business interests which were to serve his
aristocratic clientele, and he has remained flexible in his artistic expression,
as appropriate for his times.
Luckily for him in monarchist England, he seems to
had been truly inspired by mythological or heroic stories of loves of the gods
or royalty.
He never changed on that, even if the fashion was changing before
his eyes with the triumph of The Beggar's Opera, that is, he was not moved by
plebeian life or realism.
Connecting this to the debate of his erotic
inclination, it is possible to imagine that he was inspired not by the idea of
the same-sex powerful MALE patrons, but by ladies of noble blood, by queens as
well - it is well-known that he was very much attached to Queen Caroline and
took her death as a personal loss.
It could be speculated that he did not get
married not because he was a homosexual, but because the woman of his desire was
unattainable - even a composer of his status could never marry someone highly
aristocratic in those times in England.
Obviously he did not condescend to what
was available to him as a man of his profession, that is, singers and
actresses.
Yet an erotic ideal of an aristocratic lady would still
qualify for an impossible, unattainable love, as among male members of Arcadian
Society, it would be perfectly heterosexual, though.
His view on heterosexual
love, even taken from his opera Orlando that the author uses to illustrate the
point of weakening effects on man, seem to be very favorable.
The author claims
on p.79 that "the idea that by loving women the man is subdued, weakened, ...
and that Handel musically depicts such "effeminate" love madness in a man by
giving Orlando the voice of an abandoned woman."
But we can argue that a lover's
voice in Handel's operas is always high; it is rarely a tenor (Jupiter in
"Semele"), never a baritone or a basso; in "Orlando" the chosen lover, Medoro,
has a soprano voice.
Another interpretation could be that Orlando is a
battlefield hero, full of arrogance, cruelty and selfishness, and such a coarse
man is not fitting for love as he is not gentle or "effeminate" enough to be
chosen by a woman, as Angelica the Queen demonstrates.
She sings that love
cannot be won by demands or gratitude for past valor, and instead she is falling
in love with a humble and beautiful Medoro, who is a wounded soldier and whose
wounds she heals.
While Orlando demonstrates his true character when in a rage
he attempts to kill Angelica.
Why would a violent destroyer be awarded the love
of a queen? In my opinion, the author misses such points and her view is
somewhat one-sided to prove an improvable.
The theme of love triumphant
is quite prominent in Handel's operas; perhaps another emphasis could be made
that truly worthy women, as queens and goddesses, prefer to chose tender and
devoted men over boastful heroes full of themselves.
And perhaps Handel desired
women like that - to me, using the author's words, he musically adorns such
women and the love duets with their lovers with the most beautiful music. It
seems to me that he favors loves between wise kings and beautiful sensual
faithful queens, as in "Floridante" between Elmira and Floridante; in "Solomon"
the great duet between Solomon and his Queen.
And in "Rodelinda" clearly Queen's
love for her husband prevails; not to forget the great Ode for the Birthday of
Queen Anne, and even a knight and his bride, as in "Rinaldo" between Rinaldo and
Almirena, whose love wins over the sorceress Armida.
However a brute like
Hercules - another personage used by the author to show the irrationality of his
wife Dejanira - is conspicuously a basso; according to the author, this voice
could mean an abandoned revengeful woman, as it was with Polyphemus; but even if
we do not resort to cross-dressing, it is obvious that Handel uses the musical
language to show another hero, not a lover, a man crude and tough, unbending and
insensitive and who therefore perishes.
With Handel's vast legacy, any
erotic theory could find enough support in his works, as any character, from the
most vicious to the most noble, is to be present in Handel's oeuvre. This is
another confirmation of him to be such an incredible genius, and this will also
keep the question of his erotic inspiration debatable for the foreseeable
future. Comparing Handel to Orpheus, we should remember that we know Orpheus
first of all for his musical genius, while his sexuality is subject to many
interpretations. In Monteverdi's Orfeo he is an inconsolable lover of Eurydice,
and this side of him should not be omitted when we compare Handel to the
mythical musician.
The question of Handel's possible homosexuality is
interesting, if not necessarily crucial to an appreciation of his art. This book
analyses, in "graduate student" style, certain aspects of the Italian cantatas
that seem to reflect a homosexual environment. The thesis would gain from more
context drawn from biography, literature and social history. A good editor would
have pruned heavily. Nevertheless, worth reading if you are interested in Handel
the man, a complex and fascinating figure as well as a great genius.
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