Originally posted by Barbirollians
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Christmas CDs
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StephenO
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Mahlerei
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Originally posted by StephenO View PostYou can't beat King's for carols IMO. If it's the same album I'm thinking of it has the most spellbinding version of O Come, All Ye Faithful I've ever heard. A lovely collection, as MickyD says.
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These must have all been mentioned now but amongst the big bits of Christmas works I love (in alphabetical order):
Bach: Christmas Oratorio
Berlioz: L'Enfance du Christ
Britten: Ceremony of Carols
Humperdinck: Hansel und Gretel
Messiaen: La Nativite
Praetorius (Michael Schultze): Mass for Christmas and Christmas Vespers
Amongst smaller works:
In the bleak midwinter (like Barbirollians I like the Holst)
It Came Upon The Midnight Clear (Sullivan)
I am not usually a fan of modern commercial sentimental Christmas songs (indeed I walked out of TkMaxx on Saturday unable to bear the aural c***) but I do like Nat King Cole's slow jazzy version of "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas":
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rubbernecker
I'm afraid I'm a real scrooge come Xmas time and all thoughts of yuletide frivolity freeze me out. So when Mrs R heard this on CD Review in December 2008, and insisted on buying it, I admit I was not all comfort and joy. However, due to a most infectious programme and performance the icicle on the end of my nose has melted and this now gets ritually played every Christmastide:
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rubbernecker
Originally posted by MickyD View PostI like the musicians and the programme, rubbernecker, but the CD must take the prize for one of the naffest covers in years!
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Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostCan anyone recommend a recording of the Holst version of In the Bleak Midwinter - just about every album seems to have the Darke?
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Panjandrum
Originally posted by Roehre View PostThe last couple of years I listened to (among others) the following pieces of Christmas music (not in a specific order), and I will listen to a selction of it this year again:
Corelli: Christmasconcerto
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Well, Panjandrum, I think the pastorale section of the concerto makes it very seasonal - the imitation of droning instruments to suggest all things rustic around the crib, a favourite baroque device. Handel does it with his Pifa in "Messiah" and other compositions in the same style much to my liking are the pastorales by Heinichen and Hellendaal. There must be many more!
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