Few times in the year do we, at least many of us, see magic in the air. Even if one doesn’t believe in the baby Jesus, herald angels singing, and all that jazz, we tell our children that an old guy has flying reindeer and a sled filled with enough toys for hundreds of millions of children and he visits each and every child on the planet over the course of 24 hours. We tell them to believe in the impossible.
The magic.
And the music of the season has a feel unlike any other. Songs of Santa Claus jiggle like a bowl full of jelly, sure, but the carols of religious nature hold a sweet warmth to them like the candles of an advent wreath.
But this particular song takes the magic even further. Last year, I shared a carol sung by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir that transcended, narrowing the gap between this world and Heaven. Today, I want to share the song that thins the divide between our world and magic’s realm.
Yes, it’s still a song about Christ, and yet…it begins with the harp. I initially heard this song sung by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, who used bells. Bells resonate in the air, and their tin separates their notes from the voices. The Soli Deo Gloria Cantorum, who sing the version I’m sharing, let the harp flow, the string plucks like trickling water from a fallen log in the stream.
And the choir: the circle of voices carry their harmonies unbroken as though the wind itself sings among trees. One soprano holds the melody as the moon gives light to the land. There’s no dramatic swell as there was with “What Shall We Give to the Babe in the Manger.” This song simply rises and falls as water upon the shore. It is Nature’s carol, quiet and mystical. It beckons one from mankind’s harsh light into the dark forest, where its magical kiss hides in a single snowflake.
Let us find it, you and I.
Sadly I can’t get the youtube link to play – something to do with domains I think. However, I am going to investigate on youtube as I expect there will be a version there that will do the honours. I’ve posted it on Twitter, as I’m sure many folks will be able to play it out there and let’s face it – this year we could do with all that Christmas magic we can get…
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Oh no! Yes, please let me know if you find a link–I’ve got to get the Little Destroyers to school–and I’ll add it to the post. I know there was this one, but the sound’s a touch different: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pu_RNmokypk
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No… that won’t work, either. However I HAVE found a version of it online by a rather gorgeous male voice choir. So many thanks for putting it out there:)/
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Whew! I’m just glad you found it. It’s one of those songs you stumble upon because it’s not mainstream. An official favorite now. π
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You’re right – it’s beautiful:). Many thanks for alerting me to it, Jean.
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π Thanks for taking the initiative to find it. π xxx
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My WP works again but ‘his’ isn’t yet. He won’t believe I’ve listened to a carol.
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Ha! You two crack me up. I take it you’re not much for carols?
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I love music. Carols in Latin particularly.
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Ah, you remind me I haven’t listened to that collection from my music yet. My kids tend to dominate what’s played in the house. Lately lots of Weird Al Yankovic…sigh…google “Word Crimes” (the kids’ favorite song) or his name and you’ll get a sense of what I’ve been listening to. (He’s the premiere parody artist in the, um, world, I guess.)
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I just listened to his Amish Paradise. I’ve never heard of him before and would be surprised if anyone here has. As satire goes, absolute rubbish. As music goes, don’t even go there. I’m glad I’ve never heard of him. Give your kids something daft like The Wombles. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XWQMMPFtoG4 It’s rubbish but good rubbish.
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Hooray for good rubbish! At least it’s not mind-numbing kid’s music. π
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Well Ms Lee, had to get here via Bloody Lord Zoolon’s tweet! Took an age to load, so my thanks to WP…hardly…so now this old atheist is playing his King’s College Choir, Cambridge carols on ITunes while having a read of this! Still, nothing like a bit a choral music in my book.
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I agree! I know Bo is a big fan of the crooners at Christmas time, and don’t get me wrong–Frank Sinatra, Bing Crosby, and Dean Martin–no one sang like those bad boys. But there’s something so amazing about a choir’s resonance in a church. Solemn, powerful, but joyful too, you know?
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Gosh, only just spotted this comment. Most unlike me…must have been all this WP hassle of late. Where were we? The crooners? Shame they didn’t write their own songs. That said Sinatra plainly had the feel and voice for an audience. I must admit Crosby – decent chap as he seemed to be – has a voice that inspires motion sickness in me, although my late mother adored him. Give me a choir any day…I’ve been listening to Bach’s Xmas stuff this very afternoon while writing about the sea.
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Indeed. I’m not much for the crooners, though I can handle them in the background when company’s over. Give me choral and classical any day. π
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I spent an album’s worth of time in the gym this day listening to Cohen’s last album, released just before his death. What a sublime poet. ‘You Want it Darker’ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YD6fvzGIBfQ
Magnificent!
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Thanks for the share!
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Very beautiful, otherworldly, soothing, and it even calms Lucy down!
I’ll play this again for her when I must leave her and pick up the girls at school.
I sang alto in the University of Santa Cruz Concert Choir directed by Paul Vorwerk for several quarters.
One of our concerts took place at Holy Cross Catholic Church in Santa Cruz – it was one of the oldest churches in this area for it first began as one of California’s 21 missions. The church, which has been there in several different forms since 1793, had an extraordinary atmosphere.As you wrote, there’s something incredibly special about singing in such a holy place. We performed the Harmoniemesse by Joseph Haydn with the Monterey Bay Sinfonietta.
While crooners certainly have their place, especially during the holidays, I prefer more peaceful and ethereal music. πΌ
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Oh, that must have been so beautiful! And a fellow alto to boot–THAT’s why we’re such good friends. π Anyway, I can only imagine what that must have sounded like. I love old churches where the love and respect have been maintained. I’m always sad to see a church repurposed, especially an old one. I mean, if it’s being cared for, as a home, or a museum, or whatnot, that’s not bad. But there’s something tragic about a church being beat to pieces as a daycare, or being transformed into a BANK. UUUUUUUUUUUUUGH. Oh, and to have the orchestral sound with you–talk about transcendence! xxxxxxxxxxxx
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It’s a beautiful carol. Thanks for sharing. I’m going to look around for the version with bells because I spent six years playing the handbells for my church.
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If you find a version, PLEASE let me know. I was so annoyed when I couldn’t get the Mormon Tabernacle Choir version uploaded.
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So far, no luck. There are sites that are happy to sell me sheet music or a recording (only one referred to handbells while several referred to the harp). I think I’ll just have to imagine it.
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Check your email. π
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Thanks so much for trying, Jean. Says I can’t open the file.
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CURSES!!!! π¦ Well the album is “This is Christmas” by The Mormon Tabernacle Choir. Maybe you can find it online?
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Have to admit that I am not desperate. π
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The very best of the season to you Lady Jean. You have put us all in the mood with this.
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Thank you! Good music is hard to come by thanks to the kiddos–well, the boys, to be fair. Blondie will ask for “beautiful Christmas music,” I’ll put some on, and then Biff and Bash shriek for “VEGGIE TALES! WEIRD AL!” If I’m lucky we can settle for “Jingle Bells” on repeat. (insert eye roll and sigh of exasperation here)
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Beautiful! I love most any form of Christmas music. Must be season π
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So glad you enjoyed it!
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I couldn’t see the YouTube video either, but I got another version of it. It’s very groovy! I’m a huge fan of Christmas carols myself. I hope you have a wonderful Christmas, Jean Lee! π
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Thanks, Carolee–you as well!
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I too cannot see the video, but I listened to another version. Beautiful piece. This Christmas season is not that merry and bright for me, and this music reflects my mood. Wishing you a Magic Christmas and a wonderful New Year! xxxx
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DAGNABIT! Well now I’m all the more perturbed I cannot share global-friendly versions. And this Christmas is not that merry and bright for me, either. I’ll be sharing why this week.
Hugs to you, and whatever joy I can give. xxxxx
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I will look up the album, may be I can buy it on i-tunes. I love Mormon Tabernacle Choir.
I am sorry for whatever is going on. Hope everything will work out. xxxx
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I find your musical suggestions to be inscrutable so I will definitely track this one down. It’s natural, eh, nature and music together since one springs from the other? Have a wonderful Christmas, Jean. Thanks for continuing to inspire. :0)
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And thank you for reading, my friend!
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You know, inscrutable may not have been the exact tone I was looking for. Mysterious was more of what I was after. :0)
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Eh, I gotcha. π xxxx
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I finally listened to it! (Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer is an amazing babysitter by the way:) What a lovely selection. (Now I’m thinking I picked the wrong style of Christmas cd to send though!) I love your description of the sound, and it fits exactly. The dynamics are so subtle, and that minor tone to the background voices is almost hypnotic. Thanks again for sharing! New favorite over here that you might enjoy is “Carols Sing”- we’re doing it for choir Christmas Eve, and I’m lovin it. Totally different, but a nice choral piece. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nqRRciSPXlo
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Thanks for the song-trade! A Very Minty Christmas is our primary babysitting Christmas special π And I’m glad you enjoyed the piece. I’d love if our church would sing this song…
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What a mesmerizing spiral of worship, reaching and never arriving.
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Indeed, Friend. That’s one of the reasons I love this song–its lack of climax.
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Beautiful and the video link works.
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Good π
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