
audiobook
1888
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A vivid portrait emerges of a scholar’s pilgrimage through Basel’s cultural landscape, using the city’s rivers, cathedrals, and art to frame a meditation on Handel’s monumental oratorio. The author weaves personal reflections with vivid sensory details, contrasting the grandeur of Bach’s fugues and the weight of Wagner with the serene, almost sacred flow of Handel’s music. This lyrical framing invites listeners to feel the same reverence and curiosity that prompted the writer’s journey.
Beyond the evocative journey, the work offers a careful examination of “Israel in Egypt,” tracing its performance history, the challenges it posed to early English audiences, and the pragmatic revisions introduced by Mendelssohn. The study balances scholarly insight with accessible prose, illuminating how added solos and brief recitatives shape the piece without diminishing its majesty. Listeners will gain a richer appreciation for the oratorio’s structure, its choral power, and the enduring dialogue between composers across generations.
Language
fr
Duration
~1 hours (61K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Steven Giacomelli, Renald Levesque and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
Release date
2005-12-21
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1855–1929
A French poet and playwright with a taste for myth, spirituality, and the stage, he moved easily between lyric verse, drama, and puppet theater. His work also reached music lovers through texts set by composers including Ernest Chausson and Claude Debussy.
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