December 6, 2009

Christmas Music

For me (as for many people, I'm sure) one of the things I like best about the holiday season is its music. I grew up in a house full of all kinds of music, and for about six years I worked part time (and sometimes full time) in what we then called a 'record' store, The Magic Flute, which specialized in classical music. Getting out the Christmas records was part of an elaborate set of holiday rituals and meals in my family, beginning with our 'Advent' brunch the first weekend in December (Eggs Benedict) and culminating on New Year's Eve (Chicken Florentine and PĂȘches FlambĂ©es, followed by charades and then banging pots and pans on the front porch when we heard the ships in the harbour signal midnight). For probably a decade, somewhere in between these dates my parents hosted a big carol singing party and pot-luck dinner: as their friends are all both musical and great cooks, this was always a joyful occasion! Music was either playing or being played (and sung) nearly all the time, so it's no wonder that hearing carols now brings back a lot of memories--some more specific than others. For instance, we usually sang 'Children, Go Where I Send Thee' driving back over the Lions Gate Bridge from my grandmother's house in West Vancouver after Christmas dinner (we loved Odetta's Christmas Spirituals). A highlight of the carol sing event was always 'The Carol of the Bells' with all its parts. I used to take Joan Baez's Noel up to my room when I wanted some quiet time. As a die-hard Joan Sutherland fan, of course I had her Christmas album, and though sometimes I admit her operatic flair is too much for the simpler songs, her version of 'O Divine Redeemer' still brings tears to my eyes. (I met her once--but that's a story for another post.) And of course we had many traditional choral albums, and the Canadian Brass, and Bing Crosby, and Burl Ives singing 'A Holly Jolly Christmas,' and a great LP with "Mr Pickwick's Christmas" on one side and "A Christmas Carol" on the other, read by Ronald Coleman and Charles Laughton (and how fabulous to discover that this is still available! I highly recommend it).

At The Magic Flute, Christmas was a big season, of course. My fellow employees and I used to shudder at the first playing of the Bach Choir Family Carols because we knew we would hear it probably 3000 times before the doors closed on Christmas Eve. The year Kathleen Battle's A Christmas Celebration came out, it sold like crazy; I recommended it to one woman who came back the next year and sought me out specially to tell me how much she loved it (I love it too, especially its version of 'Lo, How a Rose E'er Blooming,' though lately I have been listening more to the Christmas album Battle recorded with Christopher Parkening, Angel's Glory, which includes what I consider the most beautiful recording of 'Silent Night' ever made). One of the biggest issues every year was which recording of Messiah to recommend. Opinions were always divided between 'original' and modern instruments; the version with the English Baroque Soloists under John Eliot Gardiner was a big seller. To soothe our nerves during quiet spells, my colleague Mandy and I used to slip on George Winston's December.

Music is still essential to all holiday festivities, as far as I'm concerned. We got out our current stash of Christmas CDs this weekend. A lot of my old favourites are in the collection, along with ones that evoke holiday memories for my husband (Andy Williams, for instance, and Jo Stafford). We enjoy the Boston Camerata's Renaissance Christmas and the hyper-traditional O Come All Ye Faithful with the Choir of King's College, Cambridge; On Yoolis Night by the Anonymous Four will undo any damage wrought by long days at work--or at the mall, which is equally likely this time of year. There are now, too, albums that evoke memories, not of our childhoods, but of our childrens', such as Loreena McKennit's To Drive the Cold Winter Away and Sarah McLachlan's Wintersong. We have rituals of our own, including decorating the tree while listening to Michael Bawtree's wonderful recording of A Christmas Carol (available only by private sale at this time, as far as I know)--and when we gathered this morning for our own 'Advent' brunch, the first thing we did was to put on some Christmas music.

I do think sometimes about the potential incongruity of an atheist embracing Christmas. But then I think of all the sacred music--and art, and architecture--that brings so much aesthetic and emotional pleasure, and I feel reassured that there is no hypocrisy in loving the music even though I do not believe in the specific doctrines it sometimes expresses. After all, when the overall worldview for so long was overwhelming theistic, it is inevitable that art and music should have taken religious form; to turn our back on these great achievements because they belong to a different mentalite is to turn our back on the past simply for being the past. I think, too, of George Eliot's attitude, expressed implicitly and explicitly in so much of her fiction--that, as she wrote in a letter in 1874, "the idea of God, so far as it has been a high spiritual influence, is the ideal of a goodness entirely human." I feel the same about the "Christmas" spirit: it's really just the human capacity for love, charity, forgiveness, and generosity (not to mention reverence, sacrifice, and inspiration) that's being celebrated, with nothing supernatural about it. The feelings evoked by carols such as 'Silent Night,' 'It Came Upon a Midnight Clear,' or 'I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day' (to mention just a few of my personal favourites) are really no different from the feelings evoked by any beautiful music, and the fundamental ideals of peace on earth and goodwill to men do not in fact require (and may even be hindered by) the specific myths of the Christian tradition. And yet that tradition (as GE acknowledges) for centuries provided a key framework for the development of these ideals (if not their perfect realization--indeed, quite the contrary, as history shows). And so I'm quite comfortable with the secularization of Christmas, which seems to me consistent with the goal of recognizing in ourselves--claiming for ourselves--those qualities most important to making the world a better place. It's not God who blesses Tiny Tim, after all, it's Scrooge! Why tie ourselves to the Christian calendar, then? Well, just as Christian traditions were superimposed on pagan and other rituals, so too our modern values and ideas are incorporating old ways and turning them to our own purposes. And the music really is beautiful--so I sing along, rejoicing.

What about you? What holiday albums bring back your fondest memories? Is there a song or a singer you can't do without at this time of year?

5 comments:

Sarah said...

For me, its Ella Fitzgerald's Have yourself a swinging little Christmas.

Sarah said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Jeanne said...

I love an old Musical Heritage Society recording of Carols for Christmas sung by the Royal College of Music Chamber Choir (and brass ensemble).

JRussell said...

Christina Rossetti's "In the bleak mid-winter," in any number of versions; for both choral traditionalism and Canadian content, Healey Willan's Christmas mass and settings of the advent antiphons (the latter on the album An Apostrophe to the Heavenly Hosts, Vancouver Chamber Choir).

Unfocused Idiot said...

I was raised a Jehovah's Witness and for me it was a trying time. I would have to try plug my ears to the beautiful catchy music, but it was everywhere and inevitably a song would be caught in my mind. Now I'm an atheist but I really love that I can just enjoy the melodies and sing aloud to holy night. I find it amusing how much of the lyrics I know despite myself, though I didn't know half those songs or albums.