| Related sites for http://www.s-t.com/daily/12-95/12-24-95/xmasside.htm |
| Official_Sizzling_Saucer_Lady_Report Provides the public all the facts, news, and rumors about an alien visitor from beyond planet earth. Evades the question of a mysterious coverup. Humor. | | go4peace A collection of cartoons. | | National_Employment_Law_Project A national advocacy organization for employment rights of lower-wage workers. Site includes news, policy papers, and "know your rights" publications, mostly geared toward low-wage workers' rights. I | | Henry,_Julia Contains various personal photographs. | | Salvation_Army_Campbelltown_Corps_in_Australia Adelaide, South Australia. Local chapter history, programs and services offered, as well as opportunities to help. | | Nolo Information about marriage and cohabitation, including issues facing same-sex couples. | | Nemeth,_David The travels of the author, and some of his friends. | | Stoll,_Jim Recording engineer and live sound reinforcement in Monterey, CA, USA. | | Violence_in_America_-_Effective_Solutions Paper authored by a group of doctors addressing gun violence and proposing solutions. | | 20th_Century_Women__The_E-Journal_of_First_Person_Biography Stories from the extraordinary lives of ordinary women who lived through most of this revolutionary century, recording their experiences in the family, the workplace and in society. | | The_Sixteenth_Century Describes society during this time period. | | Flexer_of_Griva Family tree featuring the descendants of Joseph Flexer; from Latvia to Quebec, England and the United States. | | Children\'s_Campaign_Inc A Florida-based organization focused on juvenile justice, Pre-K education, and child protection. Calendar, newsletter, and media information. | | Blessed_Bible Provides topical Bible studies in both English and Spanish from the Northwest Indiana Bible Students. | | Bible_Scriptures_by_Subjects Study tool addresses many subjects with Scriptures. | | Third_Day_Churches A new way of doing church in the third millenium | | Cor_Lucis A Thelemic mystery school based in Los Angeles. Utilizing the initiatory system of the Golden Dawn within the context of the Nu Aeon. | | Salvation_Communications Evangelistic site that explains the gospel of salvation from a New Testament perspective. | | Jewish_Encyclopedia__Hagar Overview of Abraham's handmaid from the traditional Jewish perspective, including Talmudic commentary and a comparison with Islamic beliefs. | | Arrow_Leadership Trains Christian leaders and mentors through personalized training programs, leadership resources, seminars, and e-letters. |
|
newStandard: 12/24/95 Reviving a Forgotten Monument of the Carol Tradition By Robert Barr, Associated Press writer OXFORD, England -- "The First Noel" is among the most familiar Christmas carols, but few singers would know "Cold Was the Day" or "Sleep Holy Babe." All three, however, were published more than a century ago in a collection which did much to shape Christmas traditions in the English-speaking world and to make carols acceptable in religious services. The book was "Christmas Carols New and Old," edited by H.R. Bramley and John Stainer. Bramley was the chaplain and Stainer the organist at Magdalen College, Oxford, when their first collection was published in 1871. Now the choir of their old college has revived that forgotten and hard-to-find book in a new recording, "A Victorian Christmas." "I think it's been a bit neglected," said Martin Souter, a graduate and former organist of Magdalen College, who produced the recording. Even at Magdalene, Mr. Souter said only three or four copies of the "Christmas Carols New and Old" can be found. He picked 17 carols for the album, some to demonstrate Stainer's responsibility for arrangements of "First Noel" and "Good King Wenceslas" which are still standards, and to point out that John Goss' popular setting of "See Amid the Winter Snow" made its first appearance in the book. Other, unfamiliar choices -- including "Twas in the Winter Cold" and "Sleep Holy Babe" -- are simply songs that he liked. "I think the piece by (Sir Joseph) Barnby, 'Twas in the Winter Cold,' is one of the most beautiful pieces of that style that there is. It's just absolutely gorgeous," Mr. Souter said. "Sleep Holy Babe" was particularly disliked by the late Erik Routley, who did much to promote carols in the 20th century. In his 1958 book, "The English Carol," he called it the worst of the 70 songs in the collection. "There is nothing else, I think, in Bramley and Stainer quite so horrifying as that," Mr. Routley wrote. "This is sort of a fashion statement, really," Mr. Souter said. "Our fashion statement is that we are becoming much more interested and much more sympathetic towards Victorian music-making and Victorian style." Christmas celebrations were banned by the Puritans from 1644 to 1660, and well into the 19th century only a few Christmas hymns were generally used in churches. "It is ... mainly to Bramley and Stainer that we owe the restoration of the carol," Percy Dearmer wrote in "The Oxford Book of Carols." That book, published in 1928 and still selling, drove Bramley and Stainer out of the market. Hugh Keyte and Andrew Parrott, editors of "The New Oxford Book of Carols" published in 1992, said Bramley and Stainer put traditional carols "in a 'respectable' form, the melodies regularized, the harmonies ecclesiastical, the texts adapted to all degrees of churchmanship." "The carol was thus -- at last -- fit for inclusion in the services of cathedrals, which had stood out longest against their inclusion," they wrote. "Christmas Carols New and Old" is a product of its time, when a reaction against the Industrial Age fed a renewed interest in the arts of the Middle Ages, Mr. Souter said. The Oxford Movement in the Church of England, beginning in the 1830s, revived medieval liturgical styles. Mr. Souter draws a link to the work of William Morris, the famous designer who was a student in Oxford in the 1850s. "Morris takes a medieval design, he reworks it and it comes out as a William Morris design, but nevertheless the principles of the work ... are very much from the medieval and renaissance periods," Mr. Souter said. "So what Stainer has done with this carol book is the same thing. ... He's taken a medieval thing and turned it into something useful for the 19th century, because 19th century musicians couldn't stomach the medieval harmonies." Mr. Souter, who runs Isis Records from his home in Oxford, says Christmas recordings can be a year-round project, but that has its benefits for the singers. "We recorded some at Christmas when they were quite bored with it all," he said. "But most of this was recorded in June, when they were much fresher. They didn't mind doing Christmas in June, they'd all done their exams, the sun was shining and they were on a bit of a high." For information on the recording, write Isis Records, 52 Argyle St., Oxford OX4 1SS, England. Please mail any comments to Newsroom@S-T.comThis page has been accessed times. |
|