Showing posts with label Christmas Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas Music. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 20, 2022

Christmas music - Instrumental Christmas carols


Cute videos with Christmas songs to help you create a beautiful Christmas atmosphere in family gatherings or Christmas Eve. Create a relaxed and joyful Christmas time for you and your loved ones.

Monday, December 19, 2022

AUDIOJUNKIE: Yule music specialist Elizabeth Chan, true boss of Christmas

by Punch Liwanag, MB

Elizabeth Chan (Facebook)

Let this Christmas music specialist help you get in a merry mood.

By this time next week, Christmas would be over as far as the actual date is concerned. But that doesn’t mean the party stops on Dec. 25. Actually, for us Pinoys, Christmas is just the precursor to an even bigger excuse to party on the New Year celebrations that comes a week after.

Just being on brand as the ones who celebrate the season the longest. But did you know that for some, looking forward to the Holidays is a year-round thing? 


That’s what it’s like for Elizabeth Chan. Since her 2013 debut, the New York native has established herself as a music act that specializes exclusively in Christmas music.

Elizabeth Chan has Pinoy roots and had a successful job in marketing (worked for Condé Nast) before deciding a full-time career as a singer and songwriter of Christmas music. Her songs “Fa La La” and “Best Gift Ever” (released in 2013 and 2018 respectively) have both charted in Billboard’s adult contemporary Top 20 chart. And just last year she released “The Queen of Christmas” – a spoken word and music album that told the story of, who else? The Queen of Christmas of course!

So, one could say that she’s made Christmas her business. While everyone is looking at December as the winding down of the year, it’s actually when Elizabeth Chan is the busiest. And that’s the case once again as she works her latest and 12th album titled ”12 Months Of Christmas.”

Forget hearing about “Jingle Bells” and all those old songs that have long entered public domain status, because Elizabeth Chan is all about her new songs. 

Beyond singing about hollies, trees and reindeers, E.C. sings about strength of character on opening song “Avalanche.” Even those who sing songs about the merriest time of the year, can feel all sorts of pressure. Now you know.

And don’t let it be said that E.C. asks only about material stuff for Christmas, we all could take a page from her book and ask for something, or someone, who could probably make our lives a little better, like what she does on “New Boss For Christmas.” Here she sings, ‘Just think of all the ways that I could endeavor / live a life that’s better and work with someone who / understands the hustle,’ she continues that you can wish for ‘a new face, a new job, a new place,’ or simply, ‘a new boss.’ It’s quite cheeky but true, and it’s also got a catchy melody to boot. 

“This Is My Year” is a rousing song that goes beyond what passes for traditional Christmas songs as it’s actually quite the inspirational pop rock song and I guess that’s a first for Elizabeth Chan. Same goes for surging “Greatest Of These Days,” with its club-style stomp that extols what’s positive about the season.

Disco funky “Merry Merry,” “Christmas Around The World” and “The Santa Clause” (that’s probably her daughter singing with her) helps put the happy in this holiday-themed album.

“!2 Months Of Christmas” is an achievement for Elizabeth Chan as the whole endeavor tells more about her commitment to her chosen niche. Forget about being a pop star all year round, Elizabeth Chan is laser-focused on that one special season. And she works all those months and kicks it into high gear come the last 5-6 weeks of the year like a boss.

She’s all about writing that one Christmas classic (or two) and this album is just another step towards that happening.

Thursday, December 8, 2022

The 20 best pieces of classical Christmas music

 7 December 2022, 09:44 | Updated: 7 December 2022, 12:27

Christmas is upon us, so it's time to rediscover all our favourite festive pieces of music...
Christmas is upon us, so it's time to rediscover all our favourite festive pieces of music... Picture: Alamy
Classic FM

By Classic FM

Christmas is upon us, which means it’s time to rediscover all those favourite festive pieces of music.

Find out how classical music does Christmas, from traditional carols to obscure gems you may not yet have heard...

  1. The Nutcracker – Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky

    The Nutcracker is something of a Christmas tradition. The festive tale of a toy soldier that comes to life has endured over the years and been subject to some radical retellings. But it’s Tchaikovsky’s music at the centre that makes the beloved ballet that little bit more special.

    Read more: The best ballet scores of all time

    The Nutcracker at the Royal Opera House
    The Nutcracker at the Royal Opera House. Picture: Royal Ballet/Tristram Kenton
  2. Troika – Sergei Prokofiev

    Taken from his Lieutenant Kijé, Prokofiev’s festive sleigh-ride of a piece is not only a mainstay in Christmas concerts around the world, but on hit radio stations too. English musician, Greg Lake, samples the Russian composer’s melody in his 1975 Christmas song, ‘I Believe in Father Christmas’.

    Read more: Greg Lake’s use of Prokofiev’s Troika is one of the best things about Christmas

  3. Carol Symphony – Victor Hely-Hutchinson

    Written in 1927, Victor Hely-Hutchinson’s festive shindig of a piece takes the listener on a tour of some of the best-loved Christmas carols including ‘O Come All Ye Faithful’, ‘God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen’ and ‘The First Noël’.

  4. L’Enfance du Christ – Hector Berlioz

    Berlioz wrote the oratorio L’Enfance du Christ from 1854. It’s a huge work, which took four years to compose, and depicts not just the childhood of Christ but also Herod’s mass murder of infants in Judea, which led to the fleeing of Mary, Joseph and Jesus. The best-known section, ‘The Shepherds’ Farewell’, is a glorious blend of warm woodwind sounds, sublime choral harmonies and sensitive orchestral accompaniment.

  5. Christmas Greeting – Edward Elgar

    While not one of Elgar’s best-known works, this delicate little Christmas song showcases his pastoral roots. Descriptions of the English countryside and calls of ‘Noël!’ make this an underrated festive gem.

  6. Christmas Overture – Samuel Coleridge-Taylor

    Coleridge-Taylor brings together a conglomeration of Christmas melodies and carols in his Christmas Overture. But this work is so much more than just an arrangement of well-known classics for orchestra, as the composer’s cleverly placed integrations show.

    It is thought the piece was composed by Coleridge-Taylor for the children’s play, The Forest of Wild Thyme. The work was published posthumously in 1925, 13 years after the composer’s death, age just 37.

  7. Christmas Prelude for Chamber Orchestra – Vítězslava Kaprálová

    Czech composer, Vítězslava Kaprálová, wrote the orchestral miniature, Christmas Prelude for Chamber Orchestra, in 1939 for a Christmas program on the Paris PTT Radio. The unusual timbre of the work sets this short orchestral excursion apart from other festive favourites in this list, with the role of the harp beside the chamber orchestra and piano bringing a new colour to the work.

  8. Song for Snow – Florence Price

    Written in 1930, this beautiful work by Florence Price for chorus and piano opens with the evocative lyric, ‘The earth is lighter than the sky’. The song’s text comes from a poem of the same name by American author, Elizabeth Coatsworth.

    Price’s vocal lines emulate falling snowflakes with an overarching descending melody, and a delicate piano accompaniment. Soft staccato homophony later evokes an icy landscape, before returning to the sweet, laid-back melody.

  9. Sleigh Ride – Leopold Mozart

    Leopold Mozart’s Sleigh Ride takes the listener on a quaint though brief trot through a snowy forest on the back of a horse-drawn sleigh. Complete with an almost continuous drone of sleigh bells, ‘Schlittenfahrt’ was written by Leopold shortly before the birth of his son, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Alongside the festive percussion instrument, the score also calls for a rattle, a whip, and triangle among the orchestra.

    The younger Mozart would quote from his father’s festive work in his own ‘3 German Dances’ a few decades later.

  10. A Ceremony of Carols – Benjamin Britten

    This Christmas choral staple is one of Britten’s best-known works. Scored for three-part treble chorus, solo voices and harp, the piece is based on medieval carols.

    The work was originally scored for and first performed by the women of the Fleet Street Choir, but Britten quickly decided that the sound of boys’ treble voices were better at reflecting the child-like innocence he wanted to achieve through his setting.

  11. Sleigh Ride – Leroy Anderson

    The second Sleigh Ride on our list was written two centuries after Leopold Mozart’s work, but contains just as many sleigh bell passages. Leroy Anderson’s Sleigh Ride, written in 1948, is a light orchestral standard, and was famously written during a heatwave in July.

    Like the Mozart work, Anderson employs another unusual instrument in his orchestration – this time, the use of woodblocks to create a horse-like ‘clip-clop’. Towards the end of the piece, a trumpeter is also instructed to make the sound of a horse whinnying using the brass instrument.

    Read more: The 30 greatest Christmas carols of all time

  12. Christmas Concerto – Arcangelo Corelli

    The pastoral strains of Corelli’s Christmas Concerto have been a festive mainstay since the work’s publication in 1714. Published as Concerto grosso in G minor, Op. 6, No. 8, the work was published posthumously and gained its Christmas name due to an inscription on the title page reading, ‘Fatto per la notte di Natale (made for the night of Christmas)’.

    Corelli uses folk-like tunes, and sounds evoking bagpipes to conjure images of the biblical shepherds attending the manger at the birth of Jesus.

  13. Christmas Oratorio – Johann Sebastian Bach

    Written in 1734, J.S. Bach’s popular Christmas work is one of the choral masterpieces of the Baroque era. The Christmas Oratorio was written in six parts, for performance on one of the major feast days during the period between Christmas Day and Epiphany.

    Despite this, Bach clearly envisaged the work being heard as one united whole, and the full oratorio can be heard in churches across the world over the festive season.

  14. Messiah – George Frideric Handel

    This English-language oratorio by Handel may have been composed for and first performed during Eastertide, but the choral work is a mainstay in Christmas concerts around the world.

    Handel confidently announces the birth of Christ with a radiant section of his Messiah that quotes St Luke’s gospel, ‘For Unto Us A Child Is Born’, and the famed ‘Hallelujah’ Chorus, despite being written to proclaim Christ’s Resurrection, is often associated with the Christmas season.


    'Silent monks' perform Handel's Hallelujah Chorus in hilarious high school concert
    Credit: South Kitsap High School
  15. Oratorio de Noël – Camille Saint-Saëns

    Saint-Saëns wrote this oratorio in just one fortnight, submitting the work just 10 days before its premiere performance in 1858. Scored for soloists, chorus, organ, strings and harp, the composer was highly influenced by music from traditional Christmas church liturgies.

    The cantata-like work is divided into 10 movements; first a prelude, followed by nine vocal pieces.

  16. Christmas Eve: Orchestral Suite – Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov

    This sweeping orchestral suite was inspired by Rimsky-Korsakov’s four-act opera, Christmas Eve, written between 1894-95. In turn, his Christmas opera is based on an 1832 story by Russian Novelist, Nikolai Gogol, of the same name.

    The magical story takes place in the snowy setting of Dikanka, Ukraine, and characters include the devil, witches, wizards, and spirits of both good and evil nature.

  17. Stella Natalis – Karl Jenkins

    Written in 2009, Welsh composer Sir Karl Jenkins’ 12-movement work explores the various themes of Christmastide. Stella Natalis, which translates to ‘star of birth’ or ‘star of origin’, draws inspiration from Bible Psalms, but also Zulu texts, and Hindu gods.

  18. Winter – Antonio Vivaldi

    While not strictly a Christmas work, Vivaldi’s fourth season, Winter, is a masterclass in depicting scenery through music. The Italian composer’s writing for violin and orchestra evokes visions of icy surroundings and bitter winds, particularly in the fast and frenzied high-pitched plucking from the strings.

    Vivaldi's 'Winter' from the Arctic Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra
    Henning Kraggerud and The Arctic Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra.
  19. Christmas Waltz – Tchaikovsky

    Like Vivaldi, Tchaikovsky also wrote a work dedicated to the Earth’s seasons. However, unlike Vivaldi’s four, Tchaikovsky wrote twelve movements, one for each of the months of the year. His twelfth movement was his Christmas Waltz, which is often performed on its own.

    This dainty work for solo piano has metamorphosed into various orchestral arrangements since its publication, like the one below, and can be heard in concert halls around the world at Christmas time.

  20. Christmas Tree Suite – Franz Liszt

    Liszt’s Christmas Tree Suite (Weihnachtsbaum) is made up of 12 pieces for solo piano and is dedicated to his first grandchild, Daniela von Bülow. The suite includes pieces called ‘O Holy Night’, ‘Adeste Fideles’, and ‘Evening Bells’ (Abendglocken).

    The work received its premiere on Christmas Day 1881 in Daniela’s hotel room in Rome, where she was staying with her grandfather. Perhaps a Christmas gift, it is regardless an appropriate date for a first performance of this ‘Weihnachts’ work.

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Thursday, December 17, 2020

The original lyrics to ‘Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas’ ...

 ... weren’t very merry at all


Judy Garland singing 'Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas'
Judy Garland singing 'Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas'. Picture: Loew's, Inc.

By Maddy Shaw Roberts, ClassicFM London

Did you know ‘Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas’ could have had very different words? A glimpse into the journey the famous Christmas song has been on…

‘Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas’ is the musical equivalent of a warm hug; a gently melancholic melody sings out a narrative of festive hope, telling of a nostalgia for past times – “happy golden days of yore” – but faith in the future – “From now on, our troubles will be out of sight”.

Judy Garland, the shining star of Hollywood’s Golden Era, sang it first for a scene in Meet Me in St Louis (1944) in which her character comforts her younger sister, Margaret.

The song “began with the melody,” says songwriter Hugh Martin. “I found a little madrigal-like tune that I liked but couldn’t make work, so I played with it for two or three days and then threw it in the wastebasket.”

But his collaborator, Ralph Blane, heard it and reckoned Martin was mad to throw it out. “We dug around the wastebasket and found it,” Blane recalled. “Thank the Lord we found it.”

But, the lyrics weren’t quite right.

Read more: What makes Christmas music so Christmassy? >

So, producers requested a rewrite.

The song’s original lyrics, as dreamed up by Martin and Blane, evoked a very different Christmas feeling: ‘Have yourself a merry little Christmas // It may be your last // Next year we may all be living in the past.’

Garland objected to the lyrics, apparently, saying they were too depressing and if she were to sing them, “Margaret will cry, and they’ll think I’m a monster”.

Eager to please their leading lady, Hollywood executives requested a rewrite. “They said, ‘No, no – it’s a sad scene, but we want sort of an upbeat song, which will make it even sadder if she’s smiling through her tears,” Martin said.

But Martin, who has since claimed the whole soundtrack was his work alone with no contribution from Blane, wasn’t keen for a rewrite. He had to be firmly nudged by a friend, actor Tom Drake, to write a new verse.

And eventually, he did.

Read more: The story behind the most disturbing Christmas carol >

Judy Garland sings to younger sister character, Margaret O'Brien
Judy Garland sings to younger sister character, Margaret O'Brien. Picture: Loew's, Inc.

Which version do we hear today?

Today, two versions are popularly sung. There’s the version Martin tweaked for Judy Garland – “Someday soon we all will be together, if the fates allow. Until then we’ll have to muddle through somehow” – which is a rather poignant listen this year, as many families around the world are physically apart.

There’s also a later version by Frank Sinatra, who asked Martin to sprinkle a little festive joy on that rather downbeat line for his Christmas album.

And that’s how ‘Hang a shining star upon the highest bough’ came to replace Garland’s melancholic lyric.

Now you know the story, here are the full original lyrics…

Have yourself a merry little Christmas.
It may be your last.
Next year we may all be living in the past.
Have yourself a merry little Christmas.
Pop that champagne cork.
Next year we may all be living in New York.
No good times like the olden days.
Happy golden days of yore.
Faithful friends who were dear to us.
Will be near to us no more.
But at least we all will be together.
If the Lord allows.
From now on, we'll have to muddle through somehow.
So have yourself a merry little Christmas now.

And here are the ones we sing today.

Have yourself a merry little Christmas
Let your heart be light
From now on
Our troubles will be out of sight

Have yourself a merry little Christmas
Make the Yule-tide gay
From now on
Our troubles will be miles away

Here we are as in olden days
Happy golden days of yore
Faithful friends who are dear to us
Gather near to us once more

Through the years we all will be together
If the fates allow
Hang a shining star upon the highest bough
And have yourself a merry little Christmas now

Here we are as in olden days
Happy golden days of yore
Faithful friends who are dear to us
Gather near to us once more

Through the years
We all will be together
If the fates allow
So hang a shining star upon the highest bough
And have yourself a merry little Christmas now.

(C) 2020 by ClassicFM London