First Ever Simultaneous Live Cinema Broadcast of Handel's Messiah
Choir of King's College, Cambridge Launces EMI Classics Download, CD and DVD
Live Broadcasts to air on April 5th, 2009
Digital download and CD available in the US on May 19th, 2009 DVD available Fall/Winter 2009
In commemoration of the 250th anniversary of the death of George Frideric Handel, and the 800th anniversary of the University of Cambridge , the first ever live cinema broadcast of a choral concert will take place from King’s College, Cambridge this Easter.
The Choir of King’s College, Cambridge will perform Handel’s best known work, Messiah, on Palm Sunday, April 5 2009 in the magnificent setting of King’s College Chapel. The performance will be conducted by Stephen Cleobury, Director of Music at King’s, and features the Academy of Ancient Music and soloists Ailish Tynan, Alice Coote, Allan Clayton and Matthew Rose. It is part of the Easter at King’s festival of music and services, now in its fifth year.
This will be the first time a choral concert has been carried live via satellite. In the US , on April 5th, it will be shown in forty (40) Carmike theatres in twenty-seven (27) states. The live satellite delivery will take place at 2:20 PM EDT. For a full listing of cinemas in the US , please refer to: digiscreen.ca/vmail/messiah/vmail_carmike.html. The live concert recording will be available in the US digitally and physically on May 19th. There will be several ‘taped’ screenings to follow starting April 11th, across the US and Canada . For more information, visit www.digiscreen.ca.
It will be shown in over 85 cinemas across Europe, also on April 5. This event, distributed by Arts Alliance Media in association with DigiScreen and Opus Arte, will be screened by major cinema chains in the UK, including: City Screen’s Picturehouse Cinemas, Empire Cinemas as well as independents. As of this press release, four cinemas in Austria will screen the live concert, six in Denmark , 12 in Germany , seven in Holland and 29 in Spain . For a full listing of cinemas in the UK and the rest of Europe , please refer to www.artsalliancemedia.com/opera/MessiahCinemas.html.
Through an exclusive agreement with Opus Arte, EMI will also release the film of the concert on DVD in Fall/Winter 2009, in the run-up to Christmas, while additional cinema broadcasts are planned in the UK , other European countries, the United States (a 3D version will be shown as well) and Australia during the same period.
George Frideric Handel’s crowning masterpiece, his oratorio Messiah, was a hit at its premiere in April 1742 and remains among the most popular works in Western choral literature. A native of Germany , the composer lived in England from 1712, where he was considered one of the leading musical figures of his day. In 1741, the year in which he wrote Messiah, however, Handel found himself on the verge of bankruptcy, depressed and broken following the failure of several of his operas. In London it was even being said that his career as a composer was over.
Not so in Ireland , where the Lord Lieutenant and governors of three charitable organisations invited Handel to Dublin to conduct a performance of one of his works for charity. Having recently completed his oratorio Messiah, the composer decided to use the invitation as an opportunity to present this new work to the world. The premiere – at Neal’s Music Hall in Dublin in 1742 – was eagerly awaited by the Dublin public and the hall was sold out.
Handel based Messiah on a libretto by Charles Jennens that employs verses from the bible to present the life of Jesus. The work is in three sections: the Advent and Christmas; Christ’s passion; and the events told in the Revelation to St. John . While the composer intended the oratorio to be secular theatre, today Messiah is performed equally in churches and concert halls, by professionals and amateurs alike, usually during Lent (prior to Easter) or Advent (prior to Christmas).
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