Not quite an earworm, but the same hymn (with Ledger's descant) is a favourite on the EMI (ok, Warner) CD "Procession with Carols for Advent Sunday" from Kings. We went to a few Carnival Band concerts around Christmas time, and got some CDs, but I don't recall that track.
The Earworm Thread
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Originally posted by Cockney Sparrow View PostNot quite an earworm, but the same hymn (with Ledger's descant) is a favourite on the EMI (ok, Warner) CD "Procession with Carols for Advent Sunday" from Kings. We went to a few Carnival Band concerts around Christmas time, and got some CDs, but I don't recall that track.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View Post
Aah, well it's given me a taste of the Carnival Band so I may try and hear them live. On R3 Breakfast in past years we have heard their recording of The Holly and the Ivy in (IIRC) a Cornish carol version: also with Maddy Prior's extraordinary soprano voice.
The latest carol to catch my ear was played by Petroc on Boxing Day. It was ‘As shepherds watched their fleecy care’ written by Joseph Key in the late C18th, from Warwickshire but very much inthe same vein as many of the Cornich carols I have had the joy in singing recently - and lodged as firmly in my lugholes!
Maddy’s contributions and influences on my Christmas choices is appreciated as Gaudete is a strong favourite in my repertoire!
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostFeliz Navidad. A contender (in an admittedly strong field) for most annoying Christmas song ever. If you don't know it, I urge, no implore you, not to seek it out; for it is insidiously infectious and once heard will need a strong course of willpower to erase.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostFollowing a busy Advent Carols have provided a series of residual earworms since Christmas Eve. Now, kb, some clarification - The Holly and the Ivy is not itself a Cornish carol but the St Day (Sans day) Carol is! There is however a Camborne version of the Holly and … researched by our folk choir MD. A different tune and different words. The well-known H & I was sourced by Cecil Sharp in Chipping Campden in 1909!
The latest carol to catch my ear was played by Petroc on Boxing Day. It was ‘As shepherds watched their fleecy care’ written by Joseph Key in the late C18th, from Warwickshire but very much inthe same vein as many of the Cornich carols I have had the joy in singing recently - and lodged as firmly in my lugholes!
Maddy’s contributions and influences on my Christmas choices is appreciated as Gaudete is a strong favourite in my repertoire!
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View Post
So IDNRC - it was the Sans Day Carol recorded by Maddy and TCB that I was half-recalling! Thanks for clarification Cloughie.
This is another version, this time by Maddy with Steeleye Span - this is closer to the Camborne version which our folk choir sing.
it was originally the B side of the Gaudete hit single!Last edited by cloughie; 31-12-23, 09:53.
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostYes but on checking via Spotify there recordings of both carols by Maddy’s TCB. Both sound pretty good!...
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View Post
There's also a version of While Shepherds Watch... that I've always assumed (there must be a reason) to be from Cornwall. I could sing it but I don't know how else to convey it to you! I wonder if you know such a version. I don't have Spotify: perhaps I'll have a search on YouTube tomorrow. It could be by one of the Wesleys, perhaps.
Wile shepherds watch has in Cornwall alone 34 different tunes and many others elsewhere - including ‘Ilkley moor’, ‘House of the rising sun’ and I’ve used it for Troika bit of ‘I believe in Father Christmas’, useful when singing a cappella and providing a sacred contrast to Greg Lake’s more secular take on Christmas.
Back to Cornwall the most popular tune here is Lyngham
Here it is sung by The Red River Singers - Mrs C and I are members but were not there on this occasion. It is not Cornish - I remember singing it in my youth in South Yorkshire.
It is the Methodist Hymnbook tune for ‘O for a thousand tongues to sing’.*
If you have not checked yet it is worth a look at the Wiki ‘While shepherds watch’
* Just checked and Lyngham was written by Thomas Jarman (from Northamptonshire) in 1803!
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Very many thanks, Cloughie. Yes it is the Lyngham/Jarman version that has been my earworm! I'm a bit full of Strauss atm so will listen to those two tracks properly dreckly.Last edited by kernelbogey; 01-01-24, 15:09.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View Post
Does anyone get earworms of bits of music that they haven't heard recently? That is, an earworm arriving apparently unprovoked?"The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by Petrushka View Post
Yes and those are the earworms I get the most. They can be, say, a hymn tune or anthem from my choir days that I've not heard for over 50 years. They are also the most difficult to track down and a severe test of memory skills!
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