Program Booklet
Christmas in the Nieuwe Kerk evening)
Sunday
8:15 p.m.
to approximately 9:45 p.m.
Celebrate Christmas at the Nieuwe Kerk with beautiful carols and Christmas songs, accompanied by the rich, warm sounds of our brass ensemble.
📳
Please put your phone on silent and dim the screen so as not to disturb others during the concert. Taking photos is allowed during applause.
Programme
How Great Our Joy - Hark! The Herald Angels Sing
Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy (1809-1847) (arr. J. Ray)
The First Nowell
Traditional (arr. Ola Gjeilo)
Deck the Halls
Traditional (arr. D. Holman)
Es ist ein Ros entsprungen ( 1609)
Michael Praetorius (1571-1621) (arr. H. Cable)
Ding! Dong! Merrily on high
Traditional (arr. M. Wilberg)
Wie soll ich dich empfangen
German Advent hymn, set to music by J.S. Bach
The Cradle in Bethlehem ( 1945)
Roger Quilter (1877–1953)
Gloria in excelsis Deo
Traditional (arr. Stephen McNeff)
All is Well ( 1989)
Michael W. Smith (1957) (arr. J. Ray)
Carol of the Bells ( 1916)
Mykola Leontovych (1877-1921) (arr. Á. Simon)
Koppången ( 1998)
Per-Erik Moraeus (1950)
Silent Night ( 1818)
Franz Xaver Gruber (1787-1863) (arr. Thomas H. Graff)
O Come, All Ye Faithful
Traditional (arr. J. Ray)
Feliz Navidad ( 1970)
José Feliciano (1945) (arr. S. Skelly)
We Wish You a Merry Christmas
Traditional (arr. H. Somers)
What are you going to listen to?
Gloria in excelsis Deo, glory to God in the highest, sang the angels on the night of Jesus' birth, according to biblical tradition. With a little imagination, this makes it the oldest Christmas carol ever sung. Since then, the voices have never fallen silent in welcoming the Christ Child with song.
Singing about Christmas
Although Christmas, like other holidays such as Easter and Pentecost, was celebrated with church ceremonies, this holiday still held a special place in the hearts of believers. Holding a tiny baby in your arms is something that evokes feelings of emotion in many people. That is why the birth of Christ appealed to everyone's imagination beyond the walls of the church. People sang about it, sometimes jubilantly, sometimes tenderly, sometimes with hope. That is why, over the centuries, thousands of songs have been written and sung about the Christmas story.
The oldest Christmas carol in this program is Adeste fidelis, known in English as O Come, All Ye Faithful. It dates back to the Middle Ages and was probably written by a Portuguese king.
Luther was a great lover of Christmas and wrote several Christmas carols himself. Following his example, many more were written, which are still sung today in Germany and, in translation, in many other countries. Praetorius composed the famous song Es ist ein Ros entsprungen and Paul Gerhardt wrote Wie soll ich dich empfangen in the seventeenth century . Bach used this song in his Christmas Oratorio from 1734, a collection of six cantatas intended for the Christmas season. The second cantata tells the story of the shepherds in the fields around Bethlehem. It begins with a beautiful Sinfonia in which the shepherds, represented in the original by oboes, sing the newborn Jesus to sleep on their pipes. Also German, but now from the Catholic tradition, is Silent Night, written in 1818 by a priest and organist in a small village near Salzburg. They could never have imagined that their simple lullaby would become the most famous Christmas carol of all time.
Christmas Carols
A country where Christmas became a veritable cult in the nineteenth century was, of course, England. It was King Albert, Queen Victoria's husband, who turned Christmas celebrations at the palace into a big family event that was widely emulated. But Dickens' famous book A Christmas Carol was also a huge stimulus. It made Christmas carols incredibly popular. These Christmas carols were sung in church, on the street, and at home, often to familiar melodies that came from all over. For example, The First Nowell and We Wish You a Merry Christmas are based on old melodies from the southwest of England. Gloria in excelsis Deo is an old French Christmas carol, and France is also the origin of the branle, an old folk dance that is the source of Ding! Dong! Merrily on high. Hark! The Herald Angels Sing was already known in the eighteenth century with a different melody, but became a true classic with Mendelssohn's melody. New carols were also written in England in the twentieth century, as evidenced by Roger Quilter's The Cradle in Bethlehem from 1945.
Christmas carols around the world
New Christmas songs are still being written all over the world. The Ukrainian Christmas and New Year song Stjedrik dates back to 1916 and became known worldwide in its English version, Carol of the Bells . American gospel singer Michael W. Smith wrote the beautiful song All is Well. Feliz Navidad by José Feliciano originated in Puerto Rico. He released it in 1970 and it was one of the biggest Christmas hits that year. The most recent Christmas song in this program dates from 1998. Koppången was originally a Swedish folk song by Per-Erik Moraeus. A year later, Christmas lyrics were set to the melody and recorded on CD by soprano Anne Sofie von Otter, making it the most famous Christmas carol from Sweden. And so, 2000 years after the singing angels, Christmas carols are still being written and sung.
Kees Wisse
Prefer it on paper? Download a condensed printable version of this program.
Biographies
RO Brass
Joost Geevers
Kristina Bitenc
Would you like to sing along with the carols? Download the lyrics here!
Tonight's ensemble
Justa de Jong presenter
RO Brass
Erwin ter Bogt trumpet
Robert-Jan Hoffman trumpet
David Pérez Sánchez trumpet
Elizabeth Chell horn
Mirjam Steinmann horn
Tim Dowling trombone
Wouter Iseger bass trombone
Elias Gustafsson tuba
Georgi Tsenov percussion
Fun Fact
Mendelssohn's Angels?
Mendelssohn may well be the composer of the song Hark! The Herald Angels Sing, but he actually had nothing to do with it. He wrote the melody in 1840 as a solemn chorale in a festive cantata in honor of Gutenberg and his invention of the printing press. It was the English church musician William Hayman Cummings—who had personally met Mendelssohn as a teenager on one of his tours of England—who replaced the original melody of the Christmas carol with Mendelssohn's chorale melody in 1855. And so it has remained ever since.
RO QUIZ
In which film does Carol of the Bells play a role?-
A Christmas Carol
Correct answer: Home Alone
Carol of the Bells plays a small role in the 1990 film classic Home Alone. When the film's young hero, Kevin, ends up in church on Christmas Eve, the children's choir sings this song. He then runs home to the music of John Williams, which was based on the song's opening motif.
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Home Alone
Correct answer: Home Alone
Carol of the Bells plays a small role in the 1990 film classic Home Alone. When the film's young hero, Kevin, ends up in church on Christmas Eve, the children's choir sings this song. He then runs home to the music of John Williams, which was based on the song's opening motif.
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It's a Wonderful Life
Correct answer: Home Alone
Carol of the Bells plays a small role in the 1990 film classic Home Alone. When the film's young hero, Kevin, ends up in church on Christmas Eve, the children's choir sings this song. He then runs home to the music of John Williams, which was based on the song's opening motif.
Correct answer: Home Alone
Carol of the Bells plays a small role in the 1990 film classic Home Alone. When the film's young hero, Kevin, ends up in church on Christmas Eve, the children's choir sings this song. He then runs home to the music of John Williams, which was based on the song's opening motif.
Enjoy the moment with RO Brass
Watch the Advent videos of our brass ensemble!
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