Inspired by this thread, and my own growing weariness for the Christmas carols that I’ve been hearing over and over in the stores, I’m wondering if anybody can recommend some classic religious Christmas songs?
Stuff along the lines of Silent Night and Angels We Have Heard On High, but in any language. I’ve got a suspicion there’s all sorts of great traditional Christmas music that I’ve never heard on the radio.
Argh, turn the radio off already. There’s tons of great Christmas music, but none of it is on the radio.
Hm, some great carols in any language. Some of my favorites (I like religious and traditional carols, but almost nothing from after 1900):
Coventry carol
Wexford carol
The holly and the ivy
Good people all
Green groweth the holly
In the bleak mid-winter
Lo, how a rose e’er blooming (German?)
Det kimer nu til julefest
Veni, veni Emmanuel
In dulci jubilo
Gaudete, Christus est natus
Pedida de la Posada
The famous Messiah choruses
“What Child is This.” Make sure you get a rendition with all the lyrics, rather than one that repeats “This, this is Christ the King…” as a refrain for each verse.
I adore “O come o come Emmanuel” too ( but I can barely listen to modern versions which put in extra beats all the time to make it up to a regular 4/4 tempo - It’s a plainsong chant! It’s meant to just go straight through! [/pet peeve])
For “In the Bleak Midwinter” I’m a big fan of the Harold Darke setting.
But for me it ain’t Christmas until I’ve heard “The Shepherds’ Farewell”. (But that’s partly because as a bass and a showoff I like cranking out the low Es.)
The Peace Carol is a newcomer compared to others on this thread - it’s perhaps 40 years old - and so perhaps shouldn’t be called classical, but it’s religious, beautiful, and not at all overplayed. In fact the only version I could find on YouTube is John Denver and the Muppets! I like the unusual structure and the lyrics, simple enough that the listener must find the meaning.
Pick up the Robert Shaw Christmas CDs “Songs of Angels” and “Angels on High”. Chorus, unaccompanied. I’ve been listening to these and the earliest RS Christmas recordings from the 1950s and 60s for decades. They’re the peak of my Christmas listening–I play them only on Christmas day. The carols are sung mostly traditional with moderate arrangements. There are also a few lesser-know carols, such as the “Carol of the Birds”
Off the beaten track -
J. S. Bach - The Christmas Oratorio
Hector Berlioz - The Childhood of Christ (the source of the above-mentioned ‘Shepherd’s Farewell’)
Benjamin Britten - A Ceremony of Carols
John Joubert - Torches, which was how Christmas Carol services began when I was a kid. The choir would start at the back and come through the church and up into the choir loft. An arresting opening.
On editing - I wonder as I wander is a traditional Appalachian carol that I remember fondly from my childhood. Our alto soloist would sing it a capella.
And my favorite “O Holy Night” I’ve ever heard: Placido Domingo.
Warning: The Handel WILL stick in your head, and you’ll be attempting to sing multiple parts and it will drive you crazy. “Unto us a child is bo-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-orn!”