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Howard Arman - Händel: Occasional Oratorio, HWV 62 (Live) (2017)

Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin, Chor des Bayerischen Rundfunks & Howard Arman - Händel: Occasional Oratorio, HWV 62 (Live)
Classical | WEB FLAC (tracks) & d. booklet | 137:59 min | 659 MB
Label: BR-Klassik | Tracks: 44 | Rls.date: 2017

For his Occasional Oratorio, composed in 1746 in an age of personal and political upheaval, Handel made generous use of much of his own earlier material, and this resulted in something quite close to an anthology: a choice collection of his most beautiful and most famous pieces a 'Best Of', as it were. The Messiah librettist Charles Jennens complained loudly that the oratorio was ""a triumph for a victory not yet gain'd"", and that its libretto, by a certain Newburgh Hamilton, was an ""inconceivable jumble of John Milton and Edmund Spenser"".
Robert King, The King’s Consort - George Frideric Handel: The Occasional Oratorio (1995)

Robert King, The King’s Consort - George Frideric Handel: The Occasional Oratorio (1995)
EAC | FLAC | Image (Cue & Log) ~ 717 Mb | Total time: 144:24 | Scans included
Classical | Label: Hyperion | # CDA66961/2 | Recorded: 1994

You'll find no stereotypical Biblical characters in The Occasional Oratorio; there are no characters at all. This work is nothing but a blood- and-glory martial celebration Handel hastily threw together to raise London's spirits in a crisis. (The "occasion" was the English counterattack against Bonnie Prince Charlie's rebellion.) Handel composed almost no original music for this work, instead lifting choice bits from Judas Maccabeus, Comus, Athalia, Israel in Egypt–he even closes the work with Zadok the Priest! Handel aficionados will have great fun picking out which numbers originated where. In fact, pretty much everyone will have fun listening to this music (gloriously performed by Robert King and his regulars); it is–as it were–a blast.