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A new approach to Messiah, 1943

April 10, 2021 by Joanna Parker

And from that time [1743] to the present, this great work has been heard in all parts of the kingdom with increasing reverence and delight; it has fed the hungry, clothed the naked, fostered the orphan, and enriched succeeding managers of Oratorios, more than any single musical production in this or any country. (Charles Burney)

G.F. Handel by Francesco Bartolozzi after Giovanni Battista Cipriani 1784 ©National Portrait Gallery, London, creative commons licence BY-NC-ND 3.0

At the beginning of the twentieth century, Handel’s Messiah still enjoyed a special reverential status as the most widely performed oratorio in Britain. In her autobiography, Isobel Baillie notes that ‘practically every Anglican and Non-Conformist church of any size would give an annual rendition of Messiah.’ It is surprising, therefore, that the Oxford Harmonic Society did not perform Messiah for over twenty years until 1943. Partly this was because the early concerts were made up of shorter pieces, often by contemporary composers, and it was only gradually that oratorios and the more substantial works of the choral repertoire were introduced, starting with Haydn’s Creation, Bach’s Christmas Oratorio and Purcell’s King Arthur. Perhaps also this was something to do with the Bach revival that had taken place in Oxford with the formation of the Bach Choir. In the war years, the choir performed the St John Passion once and the St Matthew Passion twice. Be that as it may, on 7 March 1943, George Thewlis conducted the choir’s first performance of Messiah with the Oxford Chamber Orchestra and Isobel Baillie, Eileen Pilcher, Eric Greene and Henry Cummings as the soloists.Continue Reading

Isobel Baillie and Oxford Harmonic Society: 1932-1942

March 31, 2021 by Joanna Parker

In May 1932, Oxford put on a three-day Haydn Festival, designed to imitate the three-day festival when Haydn received an honorary degree in 1791. The Oxford Harmonic Society participated in the opening concert together with the Bach Choir in a performance of The Creation. Dr William Harris, the organist at Christ Church, conducted the Oxford Orchestral Society. The soloists were Isobel Baillie, Edward Manning, and Arthur Cranmer.

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Tom Jones, The Battle of the Baltic and a female conductor

January 29, 2021 by Joanna Parker

Sir Edward German, English composer.
Scan of out-of-copyright postcard of Edward German (1862-1936) from wiki en: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Edwardgerman.jpg

On 1 June 1922, the Iffley Glee Club performed another light opera by Sir Edward German: Tom Jones. Based on the novel by Henry Fielding, the work was commissioned in 1907, the bicentenary of Fielding’s birth. It was another success for the composer. The music critic and cricket commentator Neville Cardus later wrote:

Next morning I heard over and over again in my head most of the melodies… I savoured the orchestration… I returned to ‘Tom Jones’ night after night; I sold several of my precious books to obtain admission.

There is a recording on cd conducted by David Russell Hulme (Naxos, 2009), and various excerpts may be found on YouTube.

German produced a concert version in 1913, which was the version used by the club. This met with some criticism from the reviewer in the Oxford Chronicle, who called it ‘a curiously inconsequent medley of excerpts from the opera of that name’.Continue Reading

Beginnings in Iffley: Merrie England, 28 July 1921

January 1, 2021 by Joanna Parker

This is the first in a series of posts giving snapshots from the history of Oxford Harmonic Choir in celebration of its centenary.

An outdoor rendition of Edward German’s light opera Merrie England on 28 July 1921 was the first reviewed concert in the long series, extending to the present, given by the Oxford Harmonic Choir, and we date our foundation from this event. At that time, the choir was called the Iffley Glee Club and was associated with the Iffley Memorial Institute, which had been set up in 1917 as a tribute to the war dead and to surviving soldiers. One of the Institute’s founders was Sir George Forrest, a retired Indian civil servant, and it was in the grounds of the house he and his wife rented, Iffley Turn House (a Regency villa, now called Grove House, 44 Iffley Turn) that the performance of Merrie England took place.

Grove House – original photograph by Robert Parker, all rights reserved.

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Recent Posts

  • Handel’s Messiah Reimagined
  • First performances and revivals
  • Early Subscription Concerts and London Orchestras
  • Isobel Baillie and Oxford Harmonic Society: 1945-1959
  • George Thewlis’s Messiah manuscript
  • A new approach to Messiah, 1943
  • Isobel Baillie and Oxford Harmonic Society: 1932-1942
  • Tom Jones, The Battle of the Baltic and a female conductor
  • Beginnings in Iffley: Merrie England, 28 July 1921
  • Bruch’s Odysseus
  • Interview with David Lancaster
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