I don’t know what it’s like where you are, but the madness is already underway here. If you celebrate Christmas, it’s likely your adrenaline is already up, as we prepare for a last-minute dash to the stores, a little surreptitious gift-wrapping, some early baking, or perhaps already receiving family.
This week on “Sweetness and Light,” we’ll stick to the basics, with an hour of music inspired by familiar Christmas carols and traditional Christmas songs.
In the former category, we’ll hear works by Philip Lane, Benjamin Britten, and Rick Sowash (his “Variations on The Boar’s Head Carol”). Then we’ll enjoy selections from a favorite Christmas album of mine, “Old Christmas Return’d,” from 1992, featuring early music performances by the York Waits. Some of these Christmas melodies have been around for an awfully long time!
In between, we’ll hear an original carol by John Rutter – now SIR John Rutter, who turned 80 in September – unbelievably, composed all the way back in 1972. I remember when it was a fairly new piece!
None of us are getting any younger. Recollect the holidays of your misspent youth with an hour of traditional carols for Christmas, on “Sweetness and Light,” this Saturday morning at 11:00 EST/8:00 PST, now in syndication on KWAX Classical Oregon!
Stream it wherever you are at the link:
https://kwax.uoregon.edu/
Tag: Christmas Carols
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Carols Are Served on “Sweetness and Light”
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Radio Rewind Vintage Christmas Carols on KWAX
I’ve been in radio for so long, when I began, recorded shows were being broadcast from reel-to-reel tape (edited by hand using a razor blade). Later, they were played from DAT tape (that is to say, Digital Audio Tape), and now from automation from a computer network.
So I really dug deep into the archive for this week’s broadcast of “The Lost Chord” – 21 years deep, as a matter of fact – extracting from a vein of probably about 100 shows that I found here on CD-R, which I likely transferred from DAT, before the station ditched the machines. According to the label on the jewel case, this particular episode aired in 2003 and 2007.
For all that, the technology is not quite as ancient as that employed for the actual recordings I selected for a nostalgic glimpse back at Christmases of yore. A few of of them date to the 1910s and 1920s. Among the featured artists are Enrico Caruso, Fritz Kreisler, John McCormack, Paul Robeson, Raymond Scott, and Fats Waller.
I hope you’ll join me, when I wipe away the cobwebs for “Ghosts of Christmases Past,” a special holiday edition of “The Lost Chord,” now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!
Clip and save the start times for all three of my recorded shows:
PICTURE PERFECT, the movie music show – Friday at 8:00 PM EST/5:00 PM PST
SWEETNESS AND LIGHT, the light music program – ALL NEW! – Saturday at 11:00 AM EST/8:00 AM PST
THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday at 7:00 PM EST/4:00 PM PST
Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!
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Princeton Snow & Christmas Carols on KWAX
Snow in Princeton for the first day of winter!
I don’t know what conditions are like where you are, but I expect, if you celebrate, your adrenaline is already up, as you prepare for a last-minute dash to the stores, a little surreptitious gift-wrapping, some early baking, or perhaps already receiving family.
This week on “Sweetness and Light,” we’ll stick to the basics, with an hour of music inspired by familiar Christmas carols and traditional Christmas songs.
In the former category, we’ll hear works by Philip Lane, Benjamin Britten, and Rick Sowash. Then we’ll enjoy selections from a favorite Christmas album of mine, “Old Christmas Return’d,” from 1992, featuring early music performances by the York Waits. Some of these Christmas melodies have been around for an awfully long time!
In between, we’ll hear an original carol by John Rutter – now SIR John Rutter – unbelievably, composed all the way back in 1972. I remember when it was a fairly new piece!
None of us are getting any younger. Recollect the holidays of your misspent youth with an hour of traditional carols for Christmas, on “Sweetness and Light,” this Saturday morning at 11:00 EST/8:00 PST, now in syndication on KWAX the radio station of the University of Oregon!
Stream it wherever you are at the link:
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David Willcocks Birthday RVW Carols Hodie
Remembering Sir David Willcocks on his birthday, directing two favorite Christmas carols arranged by Vaughan Williams.
“Yorkshire Wassail Song”
“Wassail Song”
Of course, Willcocks also conducted my favorite recording of RVW’s “Hodie,” which I got to enjoy this year on Christmas Day. Here it is again, a few days late.
Willcocks died in 2015, at the age of 95.
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Hating the Twelve Days of Christmas
“The Twelve Days of Christmas” is easily my least favorite Christmas carol. Fun to sing, maybe, but maddening to listen to. Like “99 Bottles of Beer on the Wall,” with the beer replaced by wassail and eggnog. Maybe that would take some of the sting out. But to have to listen to anyone sing it? Sinatra, Crosby, The Chipmunks, I don’t care – it’s torture.
Be that as it may, it was part of the season’s rituals to sing it as a kid. It was only much later that it became clear that this Twelve Days of Christmas business doesn’t really start until December 25. In fact, many seem to be oblivious to the fact that the twelve days run through January 6, or Epiphany – the Feast of Three Kings.
By then, for most, the gifts are already put away, and for plenty, the trees, the stockings, and other Christmas trappings are already snug in the attic. But really, everything is supposed to stay up until Twelfth Night.
On the other hand, if you’re superstitious, you don’t want them up any longer than that, or it will bring bad luck. The only way to avert it, then, would be to leave all the decorations in place for another year. Which wouldn’t exactly be horrible – I’m sure that’s what Santa does – but your neighbors would beg to differ.
Today, then, is the Fourth Day of Christmas, which I single out for the gift of “four calling birds.” Apparently, it was originally “colly birds,” “colly” being archaic for “black as coal” (think “collier”). So, blackbirds is what you would get, if you were a recipient of this peculiar Christmas largesse.
The carol has been around forever, appearing in print for the first time in 1780, but as a fun “memory song” from an era before recording artists, it’s the kind of thing that probably reaches back further into the primordial ooze of oral tradition.
What’s really interesting to me, as a classical music nut, is that so many of the familiar carols are so closely connected with the great composers. “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing” was set to music of Mendelssohn. “Joy to the World” leans on Handel. “O Holy Night” was written by Adolphe Adam (composer of “Giselle”), and so on.
In the case of “Twelve Days,” its origins are traditional, but it was English composer Frederic Austin who gave us its modern form in 1909. He codified the melody and lyrics, replacing “colly” with “calling,” and – the masterstroke – extending the cadence of “five go-old rinnnnnnnnngs.” That’s the part of the song any singer really likes, isn’t it?
Now, Austin is not the best-known of English composers, but I’ve always been a bit of a musical Anglophile, so I do have some of his concert works in my collection.
Here’s Austin’s “The Sea Venturers,” from 1935:
I know of two treatments of this insufferable carol that manage to make it somewhat interesting, and I try to play them every year. The first is “Partridge Pie,” by English composer Richard Rodney Bennett. It’s a piano suite, consisting of wholly original music for each of the twelve days. Thankfully, unlike in the carol as it is sung, the material is not repeated from verse to verse.
Book I
Book II
The other is “A Musicological Journey Through ‘The Twelve Days of Christmas,’” by American composer @Craig Courtney Craig Courtney. Courtney arranges each of the verses in the style of a different composer or historical era, reaching back to Gregorian chant and culminating in a pseudo-Sousa march. It tickles the ear as no recording of the traditional “Twelve Days” ever does. Here’s my preferred recording, with the Bach Choir of Pittsburgh and the Pittsburgh Brass. Each of the movements is posted separately, so you have to let the playlist run through to enjoy each of the twelve days.
Let the gratuitous gift-giving continue! Still eight days of Christmas to come!
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