Jingle Bells by the Glenn Miller Orchestra.
Yesterday
was the 75th anniversary of the disappearance of Major Glenn Miller in the fog
over the English channel in
1944. The most wildly popular leader of
a big band in the pre-World War II years, Miller’s tight arrangements were the crowning
achievements of the swing era. At
the height of his fame and popularity and after making the films Sun
Valley Serenade and Orchestra Wives, he badgered his way
into the Army.
Glenn Miller leading his Army Air Forces Overseas Orchestra in a concert at an English air base.
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At first
assigned to lead a conventional marching
band with the Army Air Forces
Southeast Training Center at Maxwell
Field in Montgomery, Alabama, he used his influence to
convince the brass to let him form the Army Air Forces Overseas Orchestra,
a 50 piece swing band to entertain the troops
and boost morale. After month of successful performances at allied air bases in England and making propaganda recordings to be broadcast to Germany—Miller spoke fluent German—Miller was flying to Paris to make arrangements for his
first continental performances when
the single engine light airplane he
was flying in disappeared.
A promotional photo for 1941's Sun Valley Serenade with figure skater Sonja Henie and John Payne. Miller and his big band were a bigger draw than the movie's romantic leads.
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Today we
feature a release by his civilian Glenn
Miller Orchestra in 1941. Like
many others before and after him, Miller took a crack at the oldest American secular holiday song—Jingle
Bells—with Tex Beneke as the
vocalist.
Jingle Bells never mentions Christmas and was never
meant to be associated
with the holiday at all.
The song’s origins stretch back more than 150 years.
James Lord Pierpont was the prodigal younger son of the Rev.
John Pierpont, a close associate of William Ellery Channing and an influential figure in the founding of American Unitarianism
who latter rose to prominence as an ardent
abolitionist . Among James’s siblings were John Jr.,
another future Unitarian
cleric and a sister,
Juliet, who became the mother of arch capitalist J.P. Morgan.
The artistically inclined young James was
the preverbal preacher’s son—restless
with restrictions at home, rebellious, and often in trouble. Born in 1822, he ran away to sea at the
age of 14 aboard the clipper ship Shark. Another
rebellious Unitarian lad of the same period was Richard Henry Dana,
whose account of misery at sea in his book Two Years Before the Mast
that shocked the sensibilities of mercantile New England.
James Lord Pierpont
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Returning to New
England he married and fathered
three children while casting about in a series of failed business ventures. Lured to California by the Gold Rush
of 1849 he thought to strike it rich not by mining himself, but by taking pictures of the newly rich prospectors. But like his other
ventures, his San Francisco photography
shop ended in failure.
After his first wife
died in 1853 he took his young family to join his brother, the Rev. John Pierpont, Jr., minister of
the Unitarian Church in Savannah, Georgia, which was the largest Unitarian congregation in the South. He took up residence and earned a modest
living as organist in his brother’s
church. Eventually he also set himself up in business selling house paint, varnish, wallpaper, window glass, and art supplies. In 1857 he
married the daughter of a prominent Savannah civic leader who would go on to serve as the city’s Civil War mayor.
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The historic Savannah Unitarian Church, the largest in the South, where
Jame Pierpont's brother was the minister and where he was employed as
the organist. The church posts it claim on Jingle Bells on the historical marker out front.
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Sometime during those
years, restless as ever and lonesome for his lost New England childhood, he penned a song he called The
One Horse Open Sleigh. He may
have drawn as inspiration a sleighing
party that he had rapturously reported to his mother in an 1832 letter.
In snow bound New England the sleigh was
both a necessary form of transportation
and a winter diversion. There was a
whole genre of sleighing songs. The
best known today, Over the River and Through the Woods is associated with that
quiescently New England holiday, Thanksgiving. But it accounted a family expedition in a
large, multi-passenger sled of the sort often pulled by a team. Pierpont's song was about a cutter, a fast two seat light sleigh often pulled by a thoroughbred trotter. It is a courtship song, with a young man out to
impress Miss Fanny Bright with his
speed and daring until he miscalculates the depth of a drift and the sleigh becomes “up sot.”
The song may have
mystified his brother’s Southern parishioners, but James mailed copies home and
it was sung in Medford, Massachusetts at Thanksgiving parties
sometime in the mid 1850’s. This would lead to a later spurious claim that the song had been written there.
James copyrighted and published the song in 1857. Two years later it was issued in a new
edition as Jingle Bells or the One Horse Open Sleigh. Within a decade it
was a popular American parlor sing-a-long favorite, linked in the public’s mind
with the colorful Currier and Ives
prints of sleighing scenes that adorned many homes. It was considered a winter song, but not a Christmas one.
Unfortunately, James
never profited much from royalties
from the song.
Dark clouds were
gathering that would change his life forever.
As the passions
stirred by the 1860 presidential election grew heated
brother John, an abolitionist like his
father, was forced to give up his pulpit and return to
the North costing James his job at church.
James remained in Savannah, now an ardent
supporter of the Southern cause. After war broke out the combination of a war economy and the increasingly
effective blockade of Southern ports destroyed James’s shaky
business venture.
At the age of 40 he
enlisted as a clerk in the First Georgia Battalion, which became a
part of the 5th Georgia Cavalry.
Although he was a gentleman with
connections to a leading aristocratic
family, James never rose above the rank of private. He remained in the Confederate
Army for the duration of the war, although his rear echelon unit saw little action, mostly patrolling in defense of railroad
lines and later scouting Yankee
positions during the Atlanta campaign. His greatest contribution to the Confederate
war effort came as the composer of patriotic songs including We
Conquer or Die, Our Battle Flag, and Strike
for the South. Meanwhile his
father and brother served as chaplains
in the Union Army.
After the war there
were hard times in the South and James
and his family shared in them. Eventually he found a niche as professor of music
at Quitman Academy. He spent his
last years in Florida at his son’s
home in Winter Haven before dying in
1893.
Jingle Bells
may not have been his only contribution to seasonal music. According to the
1994 book American Christmas by Jim
Harrison, “For many years Martin
Luther was credited with writing one of the best loved Christmas songs, Away
in a Manger .. .but history now has evidence to dispute his authorship.
An American, James Pierpont, is currently believed to be the author.” UUA historian Peter Hughes doubted the
claim, however. Although the song is undoubtedly American dating from some time
in the 1880’s, its origins are murky, probably Lutheran although the lyrics
were first published as a poem in a Universalist
periodical.
A book and 45 rpm single for children.
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Away in a Manger aside, James Pierpont’s claim on our seasonal culture is indisputable. By the early 20th Century, as the automobile
was replacing the horse, Jingle Bells
was being melded into the general sentimentality
of the Christmas season. In the days before the explosion of popular secular
holiday songs like White Christmas, I’ll Be Home for Christmas, Have
Yourself a Merry Little Christmas, and The Christmas Song, it
provided a much needed non religious
song suitable for performance in public schools and in mixed gatherings. The simple, lively tune was easy to sing and easy
to adapt to a host of musical styles. It has become an indisputable Christmas
classic.
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