The First Noel by Pentatonix.
Somehow Americans have
come to think that the Christmas season begins at Thanksgiving and
stretches through Christmas Day after which it abruptly ends. This is largely due to tying the season to retail
sales and gift giving since the 1920’s when Macy’s had
Santa arrive at the end of their annual parade. It got a boost during the Depression
when it became government policy to encourage Christmas shopping as
a way of stimulating the shattered economy and really took off
during the post-World War II economic boom and the stimulus of
advertising, especially on television.
In this view the Holidays
that Bing Crosby sang about would extend to New Year’s Eve and
Day after which everyone switches back to the daily grind and a
long stretch of cabin fever producing Winter.
The U.S. Christmas
includes all of traditional Advent, a Christian liturgical season
of reverent anticipation of the coming of the New Born King. Christmas for Catholics, Anglicans,
Lutherans and other Christians who observe that traditional calendar
extends from Christmas Day through the eve of the Feast of the Epiphany
in January—the Twelve Days of Christmas. It was in this season that the
celebration of Christ’s birth was exuberantly blended with ancient
pre-Christian customs including the turn-about of St. Stephen’s/Boxing
Day, caroling and street begging, country dancing, punctuated
by a riotous New Year’s, and ending with the wassailing and
revelry of Twelfth Night.
True Christmas
carols were only sung in church during this season and there were
numerous less reverent songs for the street celebrations and private parties.
No where were these festive songs
more popular than in the British Isles. Among the oldest of these songs is The First Nowell, First Noël, or First Noel.
Noel is an early modern English synonym for Christmas from
the Norman French.
The song is of Cornish
origin first noted in the early 19th Century during the fad for collecting
traditional folk song, but is undoubtedly much older. Cornwall was an ancient Celtic region
occupying the southwest peninsula of Britain with its own
distinctive language and culture.
The version now most commonly sung was printed in Carols, New and Old by John Stainer in 1871.
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The First Noel in its current form was first published
in 1823 in Carols Ancient and Modern
and again in 1833 in Gilbert and
Sandys Carols, both of which were edited by William Sandys
and arranged with extra lyrics written by Davies Gilbert
for Hymns and Carols of God. Today, it is usually performed in a four-part
hymn arrangement by the English composer John Stainer, first
published in his Carols, New and Old
in 1871.
A number of
variations on the lyrics have been published over the years and two final
verses completing the story of the Wise Men were omitted by Stainer and
are not now usually sung or included in hymnals.
Hip and modern, the a cappela quintet Pentatonix has become Christmas music favorites.
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Today we feature a
version by Pentatonix, the American a cappella group from Arlington, Texas,
consisting of vocalists Scott Hoying, Mitch Grassi, Kirstin
Maldonado, Kevin Olusola, and Matt Sallee. The group gained a
wide following after winning the third season of NBC’s The Sing-Off and now have a popular YouTube
channel. They mix pop
arrangements with close harmonies, basslines, riffing,
percussion, and beatboxing and have become especially well known
for their Christmas music.
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