Dec. 21st, 2004

Unh...

Dec. 21st, 2004 12:58 pm
ceebeegee: (Xmas Tree)
I feel sort of sick today--I woke up this morning feeling yucky and my stomach was NOT happy. I thought I was going to get sick but luckily, that did not happen. I think I ate too much almond toffee last night--when I got to Lazard there was a big box of it and I took a chunk. Uggghhh. I don't even want to think about food right now.

Carols

Dec. 21st, 2004 01:45 pm
ceebeegee: (Xmas Tree)
Last night Chris (Goatboy) worked late and, being in my neighborhood, called me up and asked me if I wanted to grab something to eat. We went to Galaxy and I maued a rare blue cheeseburger. We were commenting on the various Xmas songs we were hearing; I'm gradually starting to like that cheesy-ass song "The Most Wonderful Time of the Year." Normally I loathe generic Xmas songs but I like the bridge, especially the part that says "we'll tell scary ghost stories and tales of the glories of Christmases long, long ago." I liked the thpookiness of it--we were saying that there wasn't much mention of ghosts with Christmas except for, as Chris pointed out, A Christmas Carol (one of my favorite books EVER, as Doug knows. I'm dying to play Marley, so I can cry "MANKIND was my business! The common welfare...was my business! Charity, mercy, forbearance, benevolence were my business. The dealings of my trade were but a drop...in the comprehensive ocean of my business"). Chris said that Satan never seemed to get much mention in religious songs--I quoted "A Mighty Fortress is Our God," a Lutheran hymn that is also in the Episcopal hymnal. The Prince of Darkness grim/We need not fear from him/His rage we can endure/For lo, his doom is sure/One little word shall fell him. This hymn is also referenced in a Simpsons episode--somebody rings the Flanders's doorbell and the chimes rattle off the opening phrase. I also mentioned "This Little Babe," one of the pieces in Benjamin Britton's neo-medieval song cycle A Ceremony of Carols. This is an awesome work, written for women's voices, that I sang several times as a child in my church choir for Christmas, and at both Mount Holyoke and Sweet Briar. The pieces are so ethereal and haunting and transporting. Leve we all this werdly mirth/And follow we this joy...ful...birth...Transeamus. "This Little Babe" has a much faster tempo than the others--it's essentially a call to arms, with the Christ Child as the head of the Army of God. This little babe so few days old/is come to rifle Satan's fold...With tears he fights and wins the field/His naked breast stands for a shield...His camp is pitch-ed in a stall/His bulwark but a broken wall. With each successive verse, the chorus splits into more groups and staggers their entrances, so by the third verse you have this wonderful echoing effect--Hiscamphiscamphiscamp is pitch-ed in a stall/His bulwark but a brokenbrokenbroken wall. It sounds really, really cool. It's just a great piece in a whole song cycle of them. When we got back to my apartment, I played it for Chris and he was all "That...is...awesome." Yay! Love turning people on to art music.
ceebeegee: (Xmas Tree)
I'm listening to the Muppet Christmas album right now. During "Silent Night," John Denver tells the story of how it was written (organ was out for the Xmas Eve service, had to write a song that could be accompanied on guitar) and he says "Gruber wrote the melody to a song which has become the most beloved of all Christmas carols." Do y'all agree with that? I've never found "Silent Night" all that interesting, frankly. It kind of...drags. I'm sorry, it just doesn't do much for me.

My favorites are:

Hark and O Come (because they're soooo traditional, plus I know some kickass descants for them and I can really soar)
Sleigh Ride (technically a winter song, not Xmas, although you only hear it at this time of year--I love it because it's so rollicking and cozy)
Good King Wenceslaus (it's kind of esoteric)
Carol of the Bells (I love happy songs in minor keys--CotB sounds like it was composed by Maurice Sendak, so dark and weird and cool)
The Coventry Carol (VERY esoteric, also modal which I love)
The Ralph Vaughan Williams version of O Little Town (it's set to an old English tune called "Forest Green"-just lovely, very lilting)
I also love the song that ends the medley on the Muppet Xmas album "It's in Every One of Us"

In really good news:

My radiator is fixed and my apartment is snuggly warm.

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