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Word: handeled (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...suite at the Dorchester. There had been a weekend with Prime Minister Attlee at Chequers, and a Savoy reception by the Canada Club. Once Mr. King slipped away to visit his portrait painter, Artist Frank Salisbury, at Hampstead. There, after dinner, Mrs. Salisbury had played his favorite, Handel's Largo...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Canada: THE PRIME MINISTRY: Man in Blue | 12/8/1947 | See Source »

...movies at Manhattan's Capitol Theater. Jacob Maurice Coopersmith, a stubby, dedicated, bustling man with thick eyeglasses, caught the fever too. He caught it quite by accident. At Harvard, working on a Ph.D. thesis, he had trouble finding his way through Chrysander's 100 volumes of the Handel "complete" works: they had no thematic index. He decided to make one. After two years at it he had caught up with Chrysander, but had accounted for only two-thirds of Handel's music. So Jacob Coopersmith went abroad to track down Handel's missing manuscripts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Handel for a Hobby | 12/1/1947 | See Source »

...rummaged through Italy's ill-kept libraries (they don't know what treasures they have, he says), pieced together unpublished cantatas, pages of which he found scattered through several countries. He once corresponded for five years with a Philadelphia dentist before getting to see a Handel letter that the dentist owned. He unearthed ten unknown Handel manuscript librettos in California's Huntington Library...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Handel for a Hobby | 12/1/1947 | See Source »

Coopersmith has developed a possessive fondness for his quarry ("He stood up to kings," he says admiringly), knows Handel's quirks and traits and more gossip about him than he knows about his own neighbors in Scarsdale...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Handel for a Hobby | 12/1/1947 | See Source »

Jacob Coopersmith's definitive edition of Handel's mighty Messiah, newly published (Carl Fischer, Inc.; $1.25), was last week greeted by U.S. music scholars a one of the most important contribution of its kind in years. The Messiah, he had found, had never been properly performed since Handel's day. Original scores and pages had been misplaced. Performers and singers had arbitrarily changed notes, keys and instrumentation to suit their own peculiarities. Handel himself, who wrote the 3½-hour-long oratorio in one 24-day burst, had reworked it several times to accommodate the talents...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Handel for a Hobby | 12/1/1947 | See Source »

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