Are We There Yet?
A month ago was too early, though I'll admit I sneaked an aural peak and listened to the last two choruses. But a few nights ago, I started from the beginning. It was November. I'd waited long enough. It was time for The Messiah.
Let others drag out their Christmas decorations a week after Halloween, let retailers stock the shelves with tinsel and ornaments and candy canes. If I'm going to rush the season, it will be for only one reason: to hear Handel's great oratorio.
The piece is always just a playlist away on my little iPod. It's all I can do to keep myself from listening to it all year long. But civilization has its constraints, and so I hold myself back. One can't play a piece every single day and still love it (the scores of LaLa Land and Les Miserables being prime examples). I want more than that for The Messiah.
And so, I waited. I didn't listen in April, and I didn't listen in July. To my own persistent, "Are we there yet?" I said, "Not quite — but soon." But finally I could wait no more. And so, on November 6, almost a month before Advent, I pushed play.
And there were the familiar pulsing strings, the pause, and then ... the tenor: "Comfort ye, comfort ye, my people." I felt the weight of 11 months roll off my shoulders, the cares and troubles of other seasons. They're all behind me now. It's time for The Messiah.
Let others drag out their Christmas decorations a week after Halloween, let retailers stock the shelves with tinsel and ornaments and candy canes. If I'm going to rush the season, it will be for only one reason: to hear Handel's great oratorio.
The piece is always just a playlist away on my little iPod. It's all I can do to keep myself from listening to it all year long. But civilization has its constraints, and so I hold myself back. One can't play a piece every single day and still love it (the scores of LaLa Land and Les Miserables being prime examples). I want more than that for The Messiah.
And so, I waited. I didn't listen in April, and I didn't listen in July. To my own persistent, "Are we there yet?" I said, "Not quite — but soon." But finally I could wait no more. And so, on November 6, almost a month before Advent, I pushed play.
And there were the familiar pulsing strings, the pause, and then ... the tenor: "Comfort ye, comfort ye, my people." I felt the weight of 11 months roll off my shoulders, the cares and troubles of other seasons. They're all behind me now. It's time for The Messiah.
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