A Ceremony of Carols
Carols and Readings
Friday 14th &
Saturday 15th December,
2007
St George’s Bristol
Peter Leech Conductor
Nigel
Nash Piano
Emily
Mullins Harp
Rustom
Battiwalla Piano
'......this was another delightful pre-Christmas evening'
Gerry Parker, Bristol Evening Post
A sparkling mix of carols,
interspersed with readings, to make us think, laugh, and
reflect on the true values of Christmas.
The concert opened with the Sopranos and Altos processing through the
audience singing the sublime opening chant, Hodie Christus natus est,
from Britten’s Ceremony
of Carols, a work of
haunting beauty which
captures the spirit and mystery of Christmas.
Programme
PART 1 |
| Benjamin Britten A
Ceremony of Carols (arr. Julius Harrison) |
| 1 |
Procession Hodie
Christus natus est |
| 2 |
Wolcum Yole! (anon,
14th century) |
| Reading: |
Mary of
Nazareth - Clive
Sansom ("The Witnesses") |
| 3 |
There is no
Rose (anon,
14th century) |
| 4a |
That
yongë child (anon,
14th century) |
| 4b |
Balulalow (James,
John and
Robert Wedderburn, 1561) |
| 5 |
As dew in
Aprille (anon, c.1400) |
| 6 |
This little Babe (Robert
Southwell, 1561 - 1595) |
| Reading: |
The Christmas Silence -
Margaret Deland |
| 7 |
Interlude - harp |
| 8 |
In freezing winter night
(Robert Southwell) |
| 9 |
Spring Carol (William
Cornish, d.1523) |
| 10 |
Deo Gracias (anon, 15th
century) |
| Everyone: |
It came
upon the midnight clear - Arthur
Sullivan, arr. David Willcocks |
| Choir: |
There is a flow'r sprung of a tree
- Stanley Vann (b.1910) |
|
Tomorrow
shall be my dancing
day - trad., arr. David Willcocks (b.1919) |
| PART 2 |
| Choir: |
Past three a clock - trad.,
arr. John Rutter (b.1945) |
|
Sans Day Carol - Cornish
trad., arr. John Rutter |
| Reading: |
Our Pear Tree - Lucy Newlyn |
| Everyone: |
Unto us is born
a Son - arr. David Willcocks |
| Choir: |
Away in a manger - arr. Rustom
Battiwalla* |
|
Zither Carol - arr. Rustom
Battiwalla* |
| Reading: |
Christmas in NW1 - Alan
Bennett |
| Choir: |
Sussex Carol - trad., arr.
David Willcocks |
|
The Lamb - words William
Blake (1757-1827); music John Tavener (b.1944) |
| Everyone: |
Hark! the herald angels sing -
Felix Mendelssohn (1809-1847) |
| Reading: |
Slouching towards Bethlehem -
Alan Coren (1938-2007) |
| Choir: |
The Christmas Song - Mel
Tormé/Robert Wells, arr.
Peter Gritton |
|
Deck the Hall -
Welsh trad., arr. David Willcocks |
| Encore: |
Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas -
Hugh Martin and Ralph
Blane, arr. Peter Gritton |
*
Rustom accompanied the
choir in their performance of his own two
arrangements in the second half of the programme.
Benjamin
Britten (1913-1976)
At the onset of the Second World War in 1939, Britten, a lifelong
pacifist, followed W.H.Auden to the United States where he stayed for
three years. The Ceremony of Carols was composed during the long and
perilous journey back to Britain in a cargo ship in 1942.
The texts, often in a macaronic mixture of Latin and Middle English,
are partly anonymous, and reflect the medieval understanding of God,
the world and mankind. The traditional nativity narrative is somewhat
sidelined in favour of other themes including original sin and the
perfection of the Virgin Mary.
The work was originally written in three parts for boys’
treble voices and harp, and was first performed in the Wigmore Hall,
London, in December 1943. The version offered in this
programme was a
later arrangement by Julius Harrison for four-part mixed voices.
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Emily
Mullins (harp) began her musical
education at school where she won
distinctions at grade 8 in harp, oboe and piano. She gained
BMus (Hons) from the University of Birmingham whilst continuing her
harp studies with Robert Johnston (principal harpist, City of
Birmingham Symphony Orchestra).
Emily has performed concertos with regional orchestras and given
recitals as part of 'Celeste flute' and harp duo. She has
played for the CBSO, the Royal Shakespeare Company and plays regularly
for the New Bristol Sinfonia.
Emily enjoys teaching the harp and piano both to private pupils and at
Clifton College and is much in demand as a freelance player in the
South West where she combines her musical career with a young family.
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Rustom
Battiwalla (piano) was born and
grew up in London and played the piano
from an early age. At school he took up the double bass and played in
the London Schools Symphony Orchestra as well as developing an interest
in jazz.
Rustom studied piano, jazz piano and double bass at the Guildhall
School of Music, graduating with a First and an ARCM(Hons) diploma.
Since this time Rustom has been very active as an amateur musician,
frequently giving solo, chamber, duet and concerto performances.
This year's Bristol Bach Choir concerts mark Rustom's first foray into
the world of choral arranging, inspired by his arrangements of
Christmas Carols made for the CD 'A Special Christmas' which was
produced last year and is available this evening. Rustom lives in
Bristol with his wife Issy, and they are expecting their first baby in
March 2008.
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THIS YEAR'S
CHARITIES -
retiring collection
CARING AT CHRISTMAS
Caring at Christmas provides an emergency shelter in St Paul's, open
for homeless people at Christmas. It provides food, shelter,
accommodation, entertainment and friendship, as well as a basic health
care and advice service to homeless people.
Our year round work includes producing the Bristol Survival Handbook
and we also run the Caring in Bristol website - a resource for those
who work with homeless people. Caring at Christmas also runs Bristol
Nightstop – a project offering 16-25 year olds (although most
are under 21) emergency accommodation, on a night-by-night basis, in
volunteer hosts' homes.
Caring at Christmas, Little Bishop Street,
St Paul's, BRISTOL BS2 9JF
Phone: 0117 924 4444
email Caring
at Christmas
or visit www.caringatchristmas.org.uk
MACMILLAN CANCER SUPPORT
Macmillan Cancer Support improves the lives of people affected by
cancer. The wants and needs of those we support are at the heart of
everything we do.
We help to break the boundaries, campaigning to reduce hospital parking
costs and fighting discriminatory travel insurance policies, keeping
the issues affecting cancer at the top of the government agenda.
We are dedicated to ensuring all cancer patients receive the practical,
medical, emotional and financial support they need, when they need it.
One in three of us will get cancer. 1.2 million of us are living with
it.
We are all affected by cancer. We can all help. We are Macmillan Cancer
Support.
Call free on 0808 808 2020
email Macmillan
Cancer Support
or visit www.macmillan.org.uk
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