Friday, December 25, 2020

#ClassicsaDay #ClassicalChristmas Week 4

For the past four years, the #ClassicsaDay team has adopted  Classical Christmas as its theme for December. And why not? We have a rich body of music related to the season dating back to the Middle Ages. A good deal of it is religious, but not all -- many works are simply inspired by the time of year. 



As always, I tried to select music that I hadn't shared before while avoiding the obvious (like Vivaldi's "Winter"). Here are my posts for the fourth week of #ClassicalChristmas

12/21/20 Alessandro Scarlatti - Christmas Cantata

Scarlatti is credited with developing this form. Unlike most music performed in the church, the Christmas Cantata was sung in the vernacular, rather than Latin.




12/22/20 Rimsky-Korsakov - Christmas Eve

Christmas Eve was a four-act opera Rimsky-Korsakov finished in 1895. In 1904 he created an orchestral suite from the opera's music.




12/23/20 Adolphus Hailstork - Christmas Everywhere

"Everywhere, Everywhere Christmas Tonight!" was written by Rev. Phillps Brooks in the 1880s. Hailstork set the poem in 1993.




12/24/20 John Knowles Paine - Christmas Gift, Op. 7

Paine composed this piano work in 1862. It's one of his earliest published works, written when he was 23.




12/25/20 Margaret Bonds - Ballad of the Brown King

Langston Hughes wrote the libretto for this 1954 cantata. It uses Balthazar to "reinforce the image of African participation in the Nativity story."

No comments:

Post a Comment