Jauchzet, frohlocket!

December 25, 2015 at 10:00 am

Amid a sea of Nutcrackers, Messiahs, and TV specials, one of the best Christmas pieces gets lost in the mix. Bach‘s Christmas Oratorio is a piece which, while not ignored, does not get the recognition it deserves. It is overshadowed even by Bach’s own Advent & Christmas music (namely, Wachet Auf and the Magnificat.)

The Oratorio is actually six different cantatas strung together into one longer work. The six cantatas were not originally performed all at once; instead, they were spread apart and performed as part of six separate church services marking the important feast days of the Christmas season. Nowadays, they are almost exclusively heard as one large concert work.

Here is the opening chorus, “Jauchzet, frohlocket!” Merry Christmas!

 

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Christmas Eve

December 24, 2015 at 12:00 pm

Did you ever hear a piece and think, I know this tune, but these aren’t the words I’m used to?

 

Marc-Antoine Charpentier‘s Messe de Minuit (Midnight Mass for Christmas) is a French baroque mass which uses Christmas Carols that would have been recognized by any French person in the 17th / 18th century. The idea of singing different words to familiar tunes was by no means a new idea, and is a practice that continues today (for Americans, the most famous example of this is our national anthem, whose original words were for an English club for musicians – that is to say, drunken amateur musicians.)
Louis_XIV,_King_of_France,_after_Lefebvre_-_Les_collections_du_château_de_Versailles

French fashion … yeah …

Anyway, whether or not you recognize any of these French carols, the music is quite catchy, largely because of its origin as secular song. Charpentier, like a good Frenchman of the old monarchy of puffy wigs and silly shoes, makes exquisite, elegant work out of everyday melodies.

Merry Christmas!

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Happy Hanukkah!

December 6, 2015 at 10:00 am

The Hanukkah story comes from the Biblical books of First and Second Maccabees. If you don’t know the story, and have about three hours to spare, I’d highly recommend (besides reading these short books) going to a performance of George Frederic Handel’s Judas Maccabaeus.” Unlike Handel’s “Messiah,” (which gets plenty of plays this month), this oratorio tells like a regular story with a plot. While it isn’t exactly fast-actioned, it does has dramatic elements – something which was easy for a composer of over 40 operas!

The most famous section of Judas Maccabaeus is “See, the Conquering Hero Comes“:

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