Audio Technica
Listen to WKSU Online choose to listen in realplayer or windows media (more choices)
Search WKSU
Site Features
Programs ScheduleMake A PledgeMember BenefitsFAQ/HelpContact Us
nowplaying
March 20, 2010
What’s On Now?

A Prairie Home Companion®
with Garrison Keillor



Visit a simpler time as Garrison Keillor and friends take listeners on a weekly journey to Lake Wobegon, Minnesota with music, comedy, and the host's beloved monologue.



Also Playing Now:

 WKSU 2 News:
A Prairie Home Companion
 WKSU 3 Classical:
Classical Music with Bob Christiansen



Later Today On WKSU

8:00
Folk Music with Jim Blum

Join host Jim Blum in discovering the best from the world of folk music, featuring the work of legends and others devoted to acoustic sounds.



Sunday On WKSU

12:00
Classical Music with Scott Blankenship



12:00
Folk Music with Jim Blum



1:00
Folk Alley with Elena See



What’s On Now?

A Prairie Home Companion®
with Garrison Keillor



Visit a simpler time as Garrison Keillor and friends take listeners on a weekly journey to Lake Wobegon, Minnesota with music, comedy, and the host's beloved monologue.



Also Playing Now:

 WKSU On Air:
A Prairie Home Companion
 WKSU 3 Classical:
Classical Music with Bob Christiansen



Later Today On WKSU's News Channel

8:00
BBC World Service

For over 70 years, BBC World Service has been the globe's most comprehensive source for news. When news breaks — anywhere, anytime — BBC is there.



Sunday On WKSU 2

12:00
BBC World Service

For over 70 years, BBC World Service has been the globe's most comprehensive source for news. When news breaks — anywhere, anytime — BBC is there.

5:00
BBC World Service

For over 70 years, BBC World Service has been the globe's most comprehensive source for news. When news breaks — anywhere, anytime — BBC is there.

6:00
Other Voices

A weekly presentation of the best in public radio long-form documentary and journalism from across the country and right at home

What’s Playing Now?

Classical Music
With Bob Christiansen

7:23
Richard Strauss: Oboe Concerto (Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra)


7:50
Malcolm Arnold: 4 Scottish Dances (Boston Pops)


8:01
Pierre Attaingnant: Bransle gay (Hopkinson Smith, lute)



Also Playing Now:

 WKSU On Air:
A Prairie Home Companion
 WKSU 2 News:
A Prairie Home Companion



Sunday On WKSU 3

12:00
Classical Music with Bob Christiansen



1:00
Classical Music with Scott Blankenship



4:00
Nightaire℠ with David Roden



5:00
Nightaire℠ with David Roden



WKSU Support
Funding for WKSU is made possible in part through support from the following businesses and organizations.

Don Drumm Studios

Brouse McDowell

Key Private Bank


For more information on how your company or organization can support WKSU, download the WKSU Media Kit.

(WKSU Media Kit PDF icon )


Donate Your Vehicle to WKSU

QuickLinks
Classical Music

Royal Fireworks (Wikimedia Commons)

The War of the Austrian Succession sapped Europe’s prosperity and will from 1840 to 1848. As soon as the ink was dry on the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, England was ready for a celebration. It was set for 27 April, 1749, and it was to be a magnificent party with fireworks and music provided by none other than the great Handel.

For some reason, though, apparently King George wasn’t too keen on the idea of having any music at all! Or so we read in a series of rather huffy letters which flew among Handel, the king’s Master General of Ordnance (who had the say-so over military music), and Charles Frederick, who had been assigned the remarkable title of Comptroller of his Majesty’s Fireworks for War as for Triumph. However, once Handel had assured the King that the music wouldn’t be overly long, "he was better satisfied."

But he "hoped there would be no fiddles."

There were none.

Handel did try a few times to sneak a few violins into the band, but in the end (perhaps placing some significant value on his own head) he bowed to George’s wishes — and to practicality, since for outdoor performance in such a situation, strings wouldn’t really have added much. His ensemble was as "warlike" as they come. And it was big: 9 trumpets, 9 horns, 24 oboes, 12 bassoons, 3 pair of kettledrums, and an unspecified number of side drums. What a magnificent amount of volume it must have made!

A public rehearsal of Handel’s music on 21 April in Vauxhall Gardens drew a record crowd of 12,000, causing a 3-hour traffic jam on London Bridge. Maybe the tie-up was more newsworthy than the music; the press tells us much more about the rehearsal than about the actual performance at Green Park on the 27th. However, one report identifies Handel’s music by its alternate name — A Grand Overture of Warlike Instruments.

Though we know it today as Music for the Royal Fireworks, it appears that Handel’s music didn’t actually play during the fireworks display. That was a good thing for the musicians. The display was apparently a bit disappointing: "The rockets and whatever was thrown up into the air succeeded mighty well; but the wheels, and all that was to compose the principal part, were pitiful and ill-conducted, with no changes of coloured fires and shapes: the illumination was mean, and lighted so slowly that scarce anybody had patience to wait the finishing." But more significantly, one of the pavilions — almost exactly where Handel’s band had been playing the hour before — caught fire during the fireworks and burned to the ground.

Not one to let good music lie, Handel programmed his Grand Overture of Warlike Instruments on many other occasions, including a performance at the Foundling Hospital a month later.

And yes, he often added strings.

Share This Entry:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • e-mail
  • Reddit
  • Technorati
  • TwitThis
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb

Tags: ,

Leave a Reply






Support for "In Performance" provided by:

Kendal at Home

Copyright © 2010 WKSU Public Radio, All Rights Reserved.

 
In Partnership With:

NPR PRI Kent State University

listen in windows media format listen in realplayer format Car Talk Hosts: Tom & Ray Magliozzi Fresh Air Host: Terry Gross A Service of Kent State University 89.7 WKSU | NPR.Classical.Other smart stuff. NPR Senior Correspondent: Noah Adams Living on Earth Host: Steve Curwood 89.7 WKSU | NPR.Classical.Other smart stuff. A Service of Kent State University