London Handel Orchestra and Soloists / Adrian Butterfield HANDEL Chandos Te Deum - Chandos Anthem No. 8
Before coming into contact with James Brydges, Earl of Carnarvon, Handel
was is dire straits in London. His pension of £200 a year for teaching
the Royal princesses had stopped, as had the public taste for opera.
London had plunged into a hedonistic, alcohol- and gambling-driven
lifestyle, where the bawdier things were the better. Brydges, one of the
most colourful and roguish figures of the day, had built himself a vast
palace (from wealth plundered whilst he was Paymaster General during
the Spanish Wars of Succession) to rival anything the King could boast
of – Cannons House in north London, set up as a rival court to King
George I, where he employed Handel to replace Johann Pepusch as
Kapellmeister. No surprise that the Earl has been described as ‘having
no enmity with his conscience:’ The ‘King of Bling’ would have 13
Chandos Anthems and the Te Deum on this recording composed by a grateful
Handel. It couldn’t last, though, and Handel was eventually lured back
to the embrace of the Royal Court and London’s rediscovered love of
opera. Now the 1st Duke of Chandos, Brydges had lost his vast fortune
and his home in the South Sea Bubble financial crisis of 1720, and
Cannons House was demolished, its treasures and features sold off. It
was as if it had never been – except for Handel’s glorious music
composed at Cannons House.
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