Not
only is today the Winter Solstice,
it is the much anticipated Great
Conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn—the two largest planets in the Solar
System early this season. If your
sky is clear the two celestial bodies will seem to merge into a single bright
object when observed low in the southwestern sky about an hour after sunset.
This extremely rare event has been hyped as the Christmas Star, and in fact some believe that a much earlier
appearance may have been what the shepherds
and the Magi saw.
It
has been nearly 400 years since the planets passed this close to each other in
the sky—1623 just 13 years after Galileo
observed them through a telescope and
nearly 800 years since the alignment occurred at night so that everyone could
see it in 1226, when artisans were
still building Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris
and Genghis Khan held sway over Asia.
In
the year 7 B.C.E they lined up, as seen from Earth, in May, September
and early December in a rare triplet, astronomers say. At those junctures,
though, the planets were relatively far apart and would have appeared much
dimmer than the one expected tonight.
But since historians have
noted that in ancient Israel
shepherds only “abided in the fields”
in the spring lambing season when wolves threatened the flocks,
the May congruence is considered a
candidate to be the Christmas Star.
Others,
however, have speculated that a much brighter conjunction of Jupiter and much nearer-by Venus in 2 B.C.E. is a more
likely suspect. Since the exact year of the Nativity is not known—it could have
occurred any time in a nearly 10 year
window on either side of the B.C.E/A.C.E
divide.
Tonight
the closest alignment Neptune and
Jupiter will appear just a tenth of a degree apart. Although from our vantage point on Earth
the huge gas giants will appear very
close together, but they will remain hundreds of millions of miles apart in space.
And while the conjunction is happening on the same day as the Winter Solstice,
the timing is merely a coincidence,
based on the orbits of the planets
and the tilt of the Earth.
All
in all the excitement is
understandable. That coincidence and the
Christmas Star story have brought hope
in the darkest hour of the year of the Coronavirus to many Christians, New Agers, and even the conventionally
non-religious.
However
some Fundamentalist Christians—the
sort who deny evolution; insist cosmos, Earth, life, and human beings were all Created by God in seven days; that Jonah lived in the belly of whale; and Joshua stopped the Sun—are angry that anyone
would dare suggest that the Star was
not a literal star and did not miraculously appear to lead the Magi to
Bethlehem. Their resentment
is fueled even further because scientists
are members of a satanic elite expounding Fake News about climate change, the global coronavirus pandemic, and vaccines. Trumpism has added a dose
of rage to their long-standing science denial.
But
all of the Christmas Star chatter is reason enough to trot out The
Star Carol, relatively modern
American carol. It was the last of
15 carols composed by jazz musician
Alfred S. Burt between 1942 and ’55 which he shared privately as annual
gifts to his family and friends. The lyrics
were written by Wihla Hutson, a
friend and the organist at the Episcopal
church in Pontiac, Michigan where
his father was rector. The only public
performance of one of the carols during Burt’s life was in a service at the
church.
The Star Carol was the last of the songs, completed just two
days before Burt died in 1954 at the early age of 34.
Burt
was living and working in California and working as an arranger for the Alveno Rey Orchestra when he asked the Blue
Reys, vocal group with the band to sing it to test the harmonies of his
latest composition in 1952. They liked
it and played it at the annual Christmas Party of the King Sisters. One of the
singing sisters, Donna, was married
to James Conkling, then President of Columbia Records. He liked
it so well that he arranged a recording session with a full choir at the North Hollywood Latter Day Saints Church
in late 1953 which the terminally ill Burt directed from a wheel chair. After Burt’s death additional recordings were
made at St. Michael and All Angels
Episcopal Church in Studio City.
For
the 1954 Christmas season Columbia
released a The Christmas Mood, 10-inch
33 rpm album including most of the carols and in 1957 came out with a 12 inch LP which included more songs for
total of 12 and added an instrumental
brass ensemble on a medley of
the carols arranged and conducted by Ralph
Carmichael.
All
14 of the carols were not issued on one recording until 1964 when James
Conkling who had moved on the presidency of Warner Bros. Records released This Is Christmas: A Complete Collection of
the Alfred S. Burt Carols by the Voices
of Jimmy Joyce. The album was
nominated for a Grammy.
Caroling,
Caroling and Some Children See Him are the two most
popular of Burt’s carols. The In 1958, Tennessee Ernie Ford made The Star Carol the title song for
his first full-length album of Christmas music.
In 1947 ex-bombardier Erie Ford was a disc jocky on WOPI in Bristol, Tennessee. He soon moved up to big city California station.
Ford
was a unique country music star. The classically trained base/baritone, World War II bombardier,
and post-war radio disc jockey
adopted an exaggerated hillbilly persona
called Cousin Ernie with the catch phrase “bless his pea-pickin’ heart” for his radio program and took it to
other country music shows where he sang.
The character was featured in a three episode arc on the I
Love Lucy Show. He had early
recording success with up-beat
boogie-woogies and his biggest hit
was his memorable version of Merle Travis’s coal mining ballad Sixteen
Tons. In 1955 he recorded The Ballad of Davy Crockett which
reached #4 on the country music chart.
From
1956-1961 he hosted his own prime-time
TV variety program, The Ford Show, which ran on NBC.
On the program he changed his image,
toning down and then virtually eliminating the bumpkin act. He eschewed the cowboy hats and spangled
attire of many Country acts for sharply
tailored suits, razor cut hair,
and his signature pencil moustache. Despite the objections of both the network and his sponsor Ford Motor Company he ended each program with a gospel song. The hymns like The
Old Rugged Cross and Were You There When they Crucified My Lord became
the most popular feature on the show.
That
led to an album, Hymns, in 1956 which remained on Billboard’s Top Album charts
for 277 consecutive weeks, The Star Carol in ’58, and a string of
other religious albums including Great Gospel Songs which won a Grammy1964.
After
his prime time series ended Ford moved to Northern California and hosted an ABC daytime talk/variety show from KGO-TV in San Francisco from 1962.
Ford's voice and health were wracked by heavy drinking in his las years.
Despite
all of his success years of heavy
drinking began to take a toll on
his health and voice. He left his long-time
Capitol Records home in 1975 and
never again had recording success despite continuing to show u as a guest star on the Mandrel Sisters, Dolly
Parton, and Dinah Shore
programs.
On
September 28, 1991, Ford suffered severe liver
failure at Dulles Airport
shortly after leaving a state dinner
at the White House, hosted by President George H. W. Bush. He died in
a Reston, Virginia, hospital on October 17.
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