Friends, I've had an incredible influx of talented singers and instrumentalists this semester...I'm ecstatic, of course, and tremendously excited to challenge this group.
I'm starting to discern pieces for our Christmas concert and I'd love your suggestions for a piece or two that fit the following parameters:
-Voicing: 5-8 parts -Instrumentation: a cappella or instruments -Language: English or Latin, maybe German -Length: 2-5 minutes -Genre: definitely in a classical vein...this is my traditional choir
...and it needs to be sacred, but not necessarily liturgical.
I appreciate you sharing anything that comes to mind!
Well, it's just over 40 minutes a cappella if one did the whole thing, so probably not ideal fof lack of instruments, but if you have excellent choristers, you can explore using movements from this 1933 chorale partita by Hugo Distler as pivots over the course of your program
The attached is a new(-ish... time flies) edition of the Vaughan-Williams Christmas Fantasia (also available on IMSLP. Has an actually playable organ part that is a newly written, idiomatic organ reduction of the orchestration. It's still compatible with the orchestral parts, though, which can supplement the organ reduction.
Since most "Christmas concerts" are really Advent-Christmas concerts (often a week or more before Christmas), it seems appropriate to consider Advent music, too.
My setting of three stanzas of Christina Rosetti's "This Advent Moon" for SATB (with some divisi) has been programmed quite a bit.
One of the Christmas favorites among the many we sang at St. Mary's in Akron, Ohio was "With Glory Lit the Midnight Air Revealed" it's a very old Christmas anthem and first appeared in the Laudis Corona hymn book of 1880. This is wonderful piece to add to a Christmas program before Mass which is what we did at St. Mary's. There were others that we did for example "O Babe Divine" which is to an Italian carol; "In Old Judea," which is really a classic in its own right; and also "And There Were Shepherds," this is about the story of Christmas with a first and second choir parts. If you're interested in any of these or many of the others we sang pm me and I can provide you a list of our Christmas choir repretoire and copies.
Benjamin Britten's A Boy Was Born, for SSAATTBB chorus + children's choir on select movements, is an astonishingly amazing suite of a cappella Christmas music. (The opening movement is in the Oxford Carols for Choirs I.)
One or two 2-5 minute pieces for a 'Christmas concert' about which you've not yet shared your discernment of other pieces or any other context? Let me remember where I left my thinking cap…
I almost forgot the Introit for the 4th Sunday of Advent "Drop down dew from above"/"Rorate caeli desuper" ... which I set in both English and Latin (scores attached).
Britten's Hymn to the Virgin is a good sing, and has a great story behind its composition. Also Tavener's motet Today the Virgin can be executed with a lot of flourish. I second the Pinkham suggestion, or something from l'Enfance du Christ. The final chorus (with 5 soloists) from Saint-Saens Oratorio de Noel can be very effective, but may not have the same effect without the entire piece prior....although even as a person with a soft spot for it, it could be a lugubrious listen for the audience.
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