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The Messiah: An Oratorio for Four-Part Chorus of
The Messiah: An Oratorio for Four-Part Chorus of
The Messiah: An Oratorio for Four-Part Chorus of
The Messiah: An Oratorio for Four-Part Chorus of

The Messiah: An Oratorio for Four-Part Chorus of Mixed Voices, Soprano, Alto, Tenor, and Bass Soli and Piano

Product ID : 11498597


Galleon Product ID 11498597
UPC / ISBN 073999237603
Shipping Weight 1.23 lbs
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Model ZHC1000
Manufacturer G. Schirmer
Shipping Dimension 10.47 x 6.73 x 0.67 inches
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The Messiah: An Oratorio for Four-Part Chorus of Features

  • Handel's complete vocal score of Messiah for SATB chorus and piano

  • Enjoy Handel's Messiah with your chorus

  • Handel's complete vocal score of Messiah for SATB chorus and piano

  • Enjoy Handel's Messiah with your chorus

  • Handel's complete vocal score of Messiah for SATB chorus and piano


About The Messiah: An Oratorio For Four-Part Chorus Of

Amazon.com Review Anyone attending a Messiah sing-along is most likely to fit in when using this old favorite edition. The musicological work has been superseded by Watkins Shaw's edition for Novello, but his piano reductions are idiosyncratic. This piano-vocal score has no measure numbers or rehearsal figures, but the reduction is pianistic in scope. The choral lines are in smaller type but are workable. The price is of course also highly attractive. Listeners who truly love this work may be interested in the full orchestral score--also at a great price--from Dover, edited by Alfred Mann. --William R. Braun Product Description THE MESSIAH, Handel's most successful and best known oratorio, was composed in the year 1741 in twenty four days, from August the 22d to September the 14th. It was first performed at a concert given for charitable purposes at Dublin, Ireland, on April the 13th, 1742, Handel conducting the performance in person. As the centuries have passed, a considerable number of vocal scores have, of course, been made after Flandel's partition; notably that by Dr. Clarke (Whitfield Clarke, 1809)., and a later one by Vincent Novello. Their value, however, was more or less doubtful, their character being rather that of transcriptions in pianoforte style, with not infrequent arbitrary or capricious aberrations, than a faithful and exact reduction of the orchestral score. Neither have the more recent editions of vocal scores based on the Mozart orchestra score, with its many contrapuntal charms, quite fulfilled expectations, as they materially increased the difficulty of the piano part. Hence, a vocal score which should be in every way reliable and practical has become a matter of prime necessity. The present edition agrees at every point with Handel's original score, as it follows the facsimile edition of this latter with most careful exactitude. Slight deviations from the original, which in the course of many years have obtained almost traditional authority, are inserted in small notes in every case, the professional artist being left free to employ them or not, at his discretion.