Tag: Christmas Music

  • Jewish Songwriters Christmas Music’s Unsung Heroes

    Jewish Songwriters Christmas Music’s Unsung Heroes

    It’s been said that the best Christmas music was written by Jews. The statement is in reference, I’m sure, to the many outstanding Jewish composers and lyricists of the mid-20th century.

    Think about it: “The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting),” “Silver Bells,” “I’ll Be Home for Christmas,” “Winter Wonderland,” “Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!,” “Do You Hear What I Hear?,” “Home for the Holidays,” “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer,” and that heavyweight champ among Christmas songs, “White Christmas.” All were written or co-written by Jews.

    I think of this in reference to the birthday today of Morton Gould (1913-1996). Gould put together some delightful suites of traditional carols, which he recorded at least twice. Above and beyond his contributions to the Christmas season, Gould did so much to make classical music “popular.” Listeners who enjoyed Gould weren’t made to feel as if they were listening to something that was good for them. They were listening to music they enjoyed. Gould was most always accessible, tuneful, brightly orchestrated, and rhythmically exciting.

    Sure, he wrote for the concert hall, but he also wrote for Broadway. He wrote for film, he wrote for radio, he wrote for television. His arrangements were always highly professional, and his original music polished to a sheen. Unfortunately, this very professionalism often led to his being underrated as a serious a composer. No one was more surprised than he when he was belatedly recognized with a Pulitzer Prize for Music, for his “Stringmusic,” in 1995. He was 81 years-old.

    His music could hang on a gimmick, as in his “West Point Symphony,” which employs a marching machine, his “Tap Dance Concerto,” for dancing soloist, or his late children’s piece, “The Jogger and the Dinosaur,” which incorporates a rapper. But he could also, on occasion, engage in genuine experimentation. Take his “Jekyll and Hyde Variations,” in which he employs serial techniques, bending them to his own distinctively Gouldian ends.

    And lest you chalk up the Jewish Christmas song to cold, commercial calculation (a harsh way of looking at the fact that a composer has to eat), consider Irving Berlin. Berlin was born into a religious family in Russian, where Christmas brought with it the justified fear of drunken pogroms. Though admittedly more secular in his maturity, Berlin came to regard Christmas in America as a warm domestic tradition.

    Beautiful music is beautiful music. These artists are hardly defined by their contributions to Christmas, of course, but American Gentiles would do well to think on them with a special degree of gratitude. What would the season be without “White Christmas?” God bless America, God bless Irving Berlin, and happy birthday, Morton Gould.


    Gould’s “Serenade of Carols”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k0E_PG0obqw

    Berlin’s “White Christmas”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w9QLn7gM-hY

    An article on this very topic:

    http://jewishworldreview.com/1214/jewz_xmas.php3


    PHOTOS: Gould conducts; Berlin scrawls

  • Christmas Music Mix on Classic Ross Amico

    Christmas Music Mix on Classic Ross Amico

    I’m sure many of you have been swept into the Christmas maelstrom by now. I’ve got so much to do myself, I shouldn’t even be hosting this program.

    Be that as it may, I hope I am able to provide a warm soundtrack to your morning, as you dash to wrap everything up at work or spend a good part of your day in the car, running next-to-last-minute errands. (There’s still tomorrow, you know.)

    In case you haven’t heard the news, Marvin Rosen has been kind enough to switch with me this week. So Classical Discoveries will be heard tomorrow morning, as opposed to today, from 5:30 to 11 ET. Tune in then to hear the third leg of Marvin’s Christmas Trilogy, which will include music of the Medieval, Renaissance and Baroque eras. Knowing Marvin, he’ll range a great deal further than Schütz and Praetorius.

    I’ll be your host this morning, mixing up a fruit cake full of holiday light music, classic film scores, transporting choral performances, Christmas songs sung by some of the great opera singers, candied sackbuts and crumhorns, some musical sleigh-rides, seasonal works by contemporary composers, and a garland of cozy Christmas nostalgia.

    Everybody likes fruit cake, right? RIGHT?

    Join me from 6 to 11 ET, on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.com, for a full morning of egg nog and gingerbread. You’ll find me standing under the mistletoe, on Classic Ross Amico.

  • Christmas Music Sleigh Ride on WPRB

    Christmas Music Sleigh Ride on WPRB

    Get ready! Get set! And try not to get upsot…

    Coming up in the 9:00 hour, we’ll be going on some musical sleigh-rides. It’s all music for the Christmas season this morning until 11 ET, on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.com

  • Schoenberg’s Christmas Music Surprise

    Schoenberg’s Christmas Music Surprise

    Arnold Schoenberg wrote Christmas music? If you’re an early riser, you’ll get to hear his “Weihnachtsmusik,” a delightful work based on German Christmas carols. It will be the first of a morning full of stocking stuffers, as we listen to five hours of music for the season.

    There will be serene choral music, contemporary settings of some very old texts, abundant sleigh bells, boar’s head carols, Christmas songs sung by some of the great voices, and music inspired by the writings of Charles Dickens (and perhaps not the ones you think).

    Join me for a Christmas pudding and “Partridge Pie” (literally, Richard Rodney Bennett’s take on “The Twelve Days of Christmas”) this morning from 6 to 11 ET, on WPRB 103.3 FM and at wprb.com. We’ll be stringing a garland of cranberries and popcorn – and you won’t have to worry about pricking your fingers – on Classic Ross Amico.

  • More Sibelius Guitar Christmas Iceland

    More Sibelius Guitar Christmas Iceland

    Just when you thought that was all for Sibelius…

    Over the weekend, Norman Lebrecht shared this transcription for guitar of the composer’s “Ekloge,” from his “Four Lyric Pieces,” Op. 74, originally for piano.

    While we’re on the topic, ‘tis the season – here are Sibelius’ “Five Christmas Songs,” Op. 1. The fourth of them, “Give me no splendor, gold or pomp,” is the most famous.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eklDX_VHTl4

    More about the Christmas songs and Christmas with the Sibelius family here:

    http://finland.fi/christmas/christmas-with-the-sibelius-family/

    If you hunger for something a little more substantial from the Nordic countries, I wrote a lengthy appreciation of the Icelandic Yule Lads over the weekend, but since I didn’t post it until 9:00 on Saturday night, it went largely unnoticed. I didn’t want to hold it until Sunday morning, since the Lads descend from the mountains to commence their holiday torments on the night of December 12. Scroll down my Facebook page to learn more. It’s a real time-killer and certain to brighten your workday.

    Here’s a direct link:


    PHOTO: Joulupukki, the Finnish Santa

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