I'm going to post a #Carol a day for (what remains of) #Advent. It only seems appropriate this year to start with something from #Ukraine. This is a song we all know, but usually via the version that was adapted into English 101 years ago. Originally, it's a #Ukranian New Year's carol - 'Schedryk'. And here it is, as accompanied by bandur, the Ukrainian stringed instrument. Happy Advent and Slava Ukraini! 🎄 🇺🇦

(NB. This is a 🧵 but I'll leave the other posts unlisted.)

https://youtu.be/Jfbhw9BYbDA

Shchedryk

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2. I'm OBSESSED by PhilipStopford's setting of 'Lully, Lulla, Lullay'.

This recording by Voces8 is insanely beautiful. Warning: it's sort of mesmeric, then as the soprano takes off in the final verse you become dead of joy. Mind how you go.

https://youtu.be/Cte1DONjr24

VOCES8 - Stopford: Lully, Lulla, Lullay

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3. (I am SO behind. Sorry. l'll catch up and least post a carol for each day, even if it isn't on the day...)

So...

Here's a lovely slug of Austrian schmalz, as sung here by the Cologne Cathedral Girls' Choir in a really rather gorgeous arrangement. Death is still mentioned but on the whole it's less murdery than the previous entry.

https://youtu.be/wDevIVRkqu4

Still, still, still, weil's Kindlein schlafen will

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4. Oooh, I LOVE this one. Cecilia MacDowell's spikily catch setting of 'Now May We Singen'. I love how the voices not singing the verse make a sort of mediaeval pipe-like drone underneath, while everything bounces and pops above them. Must be huge fun to sing.

https://youtu.be/bDoxTJ2SmCw

Cecilia McDowall- Now may we singen

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5. Rutter! You can't have Christmas without Rutter. That's in the UN Declaration of Human Rights. This is *sort of* Rutter, in that it's his arrangement, not his tune. The tune is the classic French carol 'Il Est Né, Le Divin Enfant'. The arrangement is lush like brandy butter.

https://youtu.be/1fBdEa-iCpg

Il est né le divin enfant

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6. Well now, if you ask me - and even if you didn't - Christmas isn't Christmas without Sasha Johnson Manning's sweetly elegant settings of the words of Carol Ann Duffy, which together make The Manchester Carols. This one is called 'New Boy Born'.

https://youtu.be/Huq2Wq5JaWw

New Boy Born

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7. An Irish carol, this. It's a lullabye in which Mary, like all new mothers, wangs on about how lovely her baby is. Standard. It's arranged here by Fionntán Ó Cearbhaill with a slowly pulsing, waves-on-the-shore kind of a vibe. Gorgeous.

https://youtu.be/7wJG1r2O2JM

Suantraí Ár Slánaitheora

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8. Here's a new one - only a year old, in fact. Short and very sweet. It's by young, British composer Yshani Perinpanayagam: 'In Bethlehem Above'.

https://youtu.be/kqVJv-CCNIc

In Bethlehem Above

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9. You know how 'The First Nowell' is grindingly dull? Gordon Thornett is with you, so he did this to it. The very definition of catchy.

https://youtu.be/dwtAO_6IEyI

Noel! (Mixed Voices)

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10. A full on classic. Vaughan Williams, who knew a thing or two about tunes, arranged the English folk carol 'The Truth Sent From Above' into this woozily beautiful absolute banger. I do love a carol that sounds ancient.

https://youtu.be/sUfcUreoZPw

The Truth From Above

"The Truth From Above" by Ralph Vaughan Williams. Sung by The Choir of King's College, Cambridge, 1995.

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11. 'Maria Durch Ein Dornwald Ging' - which roughly means: Mary walked through a forest of thorns. A German carol for Advent. The combination of tune, arrangement and voices (the peerless VOCES8) is about as perfect as you could ask for.

https://youtu.be/JRXhY5px9Hs

VOCES8 - Maria Durch ein Dornwald ging (Arr. Stefan Claas)

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12. Lowell Mason, who composed 'Joy To The World' claimed it was by Handel. It wasn't, but he did nick some stuff from 'Messiah' for it (cf. verse lines 1 & 3). John Rutter cleverly arranged it as though Handel had written it himself. It's great fun.

https://youtu.be/JGX8umOcmPg

Joy to the World | WDR Rundfunkchor | WDR Sinfonieorchester

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13. The most exciting choral stuff at the moment is coming from @AnnaLapwood, who makes the most interesting choices for her choirs. Here's one of them singing 'Venite, Gaudete' by Adrian Peacock - an almost desperate invitation to come and celebrate.

https://youtu.be/VSKASVmcJxY

Venite Gaudete - Adrian Peacock - The Pembroke College Chapel Choir/Anna Lapwood

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@mrchrisaddison
14. To Switzerland! Where Catholic priest Joseph Bovet arranged the shepherds' song 'Ô Nuit Brilliante' for tenors and basses. It tells of the light of the angels turning night to day. Something that these days you'd be able to refer to the Council.

https://youtu.be/juWvx2lLFf0

O nuit brillante

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15. A full-on classic. Hector Berlioz's 'The Shepherds' Farewell', which has snuck out the back of the oratorio it's actually part of and become a favourite carol of choirs the world over. Lush af.

https://youtu.be/tq_nsS5FPaA

The Shepherds’ Farewell

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16. A 15th Century poem with a 21st Century setting by the Canadian composer Sarah Quartel - 'This Endris Night'. Another lullabye carol though, unusually, without a murdery bit in the middle. I'm not sure the bells would help any baby to sleep, mind.

https://youtu.be/GKoOZSGc9DY

This Endris Night by Sarah Quartel, Luther College Collegiate Chorale

YouTube

17. The late, great David Willcocks was a decorated war hero as well as a composer and the man behind a ton of the most familiar arrangements of carols we know and love. One of my favourites of his own compositions is 'Birthday Carol'. I love its bouncy, rat-a-tat rhythms. Also, xylophones AND trumpets? Sign me up!

https://youtu.be/1O2NMExHNGg

Birthday Carol

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18. Big Bobby C - Bob Chilcott - the Crown Prince of Christmas Carols has written some absolute bangers. ‘Cradle Carol’ is pure gorgeousness & at the end it manages the near impossible task of making the appalling, sickly sweet ‘Away In A Manger’ - a crime of a carol - sound rather lovely.

https://youtu.be/YZmdHpZNcpU

Cradle Song | Bob Chilcott

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19. Time to go mediaeval on your ass. Probably. 'Remember, O Thou Man' turned up in a collection of carols and folk songs compiled by Thomas Ravenscroft in 1611. I love an ancient-sounding carol. None more ancient-sounding than this.

https://youtu.be/tlwY_3WDJSM

Remember O Thou Man

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@mrchrisaddison Thank you - it's lovely. Talking about Medieval carols, I think you might like https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h7QlxvTIU6Q. It's worth looking at it on bigger-than-phone screen to get the lyrics, or see them on https://lyricstranslate.com/en/als-i-lay-yoolis-night-i-lay-yule-night.html.

Shameless plug (bit of a rag-bag of carols and non-carols - should be something for everyone to dislike): https://baccatabob.github.io/advent/bob.htm

Als I Lay on Yoolis Night | English Medieval Christmas Song (lyrics)

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