The Water Music, a collection of orchestral…
July 1717 CE
The Water Music, a collection of orchestral movements, often considered three suites, composed by George Frideric Handel, premieres on July 17, 1717 after King George I had requested a concert on the River Thames.
The concert is performed by fifty musicians playing on a barge near the royal barge from which the King listens with close friends, including Anne Vaughan, the Duchess of Bolton, the Duchess of Newcastle, Countess of Darlington, the Countess of Godolphin, Madam Kilmarnock, and the Earl of Orkney.
The barges, heading for Chelsea or Lambeth and leaving the party after midnight, use the tides of the river.
George I is said to have enjoyed the suites so much that he made the exhausted musicians play them three times over the course of the outing.
It is said the compositions spurred reconciliation between the King and Handel.
Handel in 1717 becomes house composer at Cannons in Middlesex, where he lays the cornerstone for his future choral compositions in the twelve Chandos Anthems.
Another work he writes for the Duke of Chandos, the owner of Cannons, is Acis and Galatea: during Handel's lifetime it is to be his most performed work.