favoritebean_writes: (Default)
[personal profile] favoritebean_writes
Georg,

I’m trying to recall when we were first introduced. Sometime very early on. Was it with Princess Diana’s wedding? That sounds about right.

The wedding was televised across the globe, and viewers watched in awe, while dulcet tones played through the speakers. It was then that we became acquainted. After, teachers insisted on including your works during class through primary, and even the most nonmusical among us could recite sixteen measures from at least one of your choruses.

During studies at the university, professors made certain that you were much more than a footnote in our course of studies. Your works were dissected and reconstructed in theory and history classes; your virtues were illustrated in pedagogy classes. And of course, we were required to perform your repertoire with much regularity.

Georg, there is a running joke about you. We musicians frequently tire of having to schlep out your work over and over. But come December, at least one of your pieces pays the bills. Since we classical musicians make so little, we fervently sing, “Alleluia” when we get a Benjamin or two for that holiday service.

It seems that while you’ve been dead for hundreds of years, your melodies never die. I’ve shed many a tear over having to play your manuals, realize your basslines, and sing your melismatic lines repeatedly. Well, until last year. Then everything came to a screeching halt.

On May 25, 2020, George Floyd was murdered by police in Minneapolis, Minnesota. While murder is not uncommon, Floyd’s was different, and for a moment, citizens of the world stopped to consider how we’d gotten here. Somehow, your name came up in discussions. Repeatedly. You, Georg Friedrich Handel, who died in 1759, across the Atlantic Ocean some 4000 miles away, have a history that most of us had no knowledge about. While you were penning The Messiah, one of your most famous oratorios, you were also making a profit from slave trading investments, and you did so for decades. Biographers have tried to leave this major detail out of texts for years, but evidence of your investments began to resurface in 2015. By June 2020, we were trying to figure out how to decolonize the musical experience, and historians spoke up saying, “By the way, Handel did this…” to the astonishment of all.

Unfortunately, the honeymoon doesn’t seem to be over with general audiences. So come December, many orchestras will churn out another rendition of The Messiah, just as many opera companies have revived noted anti-Semite Richard Wagner’s operas in their return to live performances. But while Wagner’s blatant anti-Semitism did not directly destroy people, your legacy did. While Wagner focused on opera, you wrote for every instrument and voice. Fortunately, for every Georg Friedrich Handel, there is a Joseph Bologne, a worthy composer and amazing violinist. Or perhaps if music from your contemporaries isn’t your style, Edward “Duke” Ellington, was a prolific and gifted composer. Perhaps audiences would discover his works and abandon yours at the altar.
I wonder if you ever regretted the fact that you profited from the trade of humans, or if you gave it any thought whatsoever. I wonder if classroom teachers and musicology professors realize the error in singing your praises, and if orchestra boards worldwide are trying to figure out how to state Black Lives Matter in practice by removing your works from upcoming concert seasons. I hope they do, but then I remember Wagner’s tremendous comeback tour of 2021, and I worry that the dialogue that happened following George Floyd’s death will be for nothing.

As a teacher, I no longer use your repertoire in my studio. I have opted to no longer perform your works as well. I no longer feel obligated to support concerts where your repertoire is performed, and instead am investing my time, talent, and money into new works by composers like Reena Esmail and Nilo Alcala.

I never loved you, Georg. Sorry, that ship never left the harbor. Yet, the disappointment I have for your past deeds is palpable. May you fade at long last.

Immer,

Favorite Bean



***
Author note: Thank you for reading. For more on Handel and his involvement with the slave trade, please visit the following links below.

1)https://musicologynow.org/handel-and-the-royal-african-company/

2) https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/even-handel-profited-from-the-slave-trade-wqz7l6m7f

3) https://www.thespco.org/blog/artists-respond-to-handels-investment-in-the-transatlantic-slave-trade/

4) https://www.classicfm.com/composers/handel/royal-academy-of-music-decolonise-collection-slave-trade/

Date: 2021-11-13 05:33 am (UTC)
halfshellvenus: (Default)
From: [personal profile] halfshellvenus
I never knew this about Handel! How awful.

For some reason, it's all the more disturbing because all of it was so remote from him, but he casually decided that it seemed a good investment-- the destruction and misery of other people-- and offered his money for the venture.

Many others did as well, each making the same immoral choice, but without all of their financial backing it likely would not have been possible or at least might have gone on for so long. :(

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