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  • Christmas songs: Musicians share favourites, from Nat King Cole to

    Toronto Star, Canada
    Dec 22 2012


    Christmas songs: Musicians share favourites, from Nat King Cole to The Messiah


    By Oakland Ross
    Feature Writer

    What would Christmas be like without Christmas music?

    Ask Gayane Bareghamyan. She can't imagine Christmas in any other way -
    or at least not the Christmases of her youth.

    `During the Soviet regime, people weren't too much connected to the
    church,' says Bareghamyan, who grew up in Armenia when the country
    chafed under Moscow's thumb. `There was no Christmas music in
    Armenia.'

    Yerevan and other Armenian cities pulse with carols at Christmastime
    now, but that's little consolation to Bareghamyan, who remembers a
    time when a silent night at Christmas meant exactly that and nothing
    more.

    A violin teacher by profession, and a music lover by avocation,
    Bareghamyan cannot name a single special piece of music she associates
    with the Christmas season.

    `I'm very sorry,' she says. `Not a particular one.'

    To many Canadians, such a predicament would seem unthinkable.

    For them, music is to Christmas what oxygen is to life.

    `We used to fight on Christmas morning about what music to listen to
    during the opening of presents,' remembers Mervon Mehta, executive
    director of performing arts at the Royal Conservatory of Music, who
    grew up in Montreal. `We were all dragged to our Christmas concerts,
    to sing beautifully or badly. It was absolutely perfect.'

    That is Christmas for most Canadians - a time for food and family, for
    laughter and gifts, but also for music and song.

    `When families come together, music can create a certain atmosphere,'
    says Johannes Debus, music director of the Canadian Opera Company, who
    grew up in a small town in Germany. `Those tunes create in me certain
    feelings of home. It's a certain nostalgic feeling.'

    That feeling can be enjoyed and celebrated by means of any human sense
    - whether taste or touch or sight or smell - but it may well be
    through our ears and with our voices that we most fully experience
    that thrill of community and communion that resides near the heart of
    what we talk about when we talk about the spirit of Christmas.

    In the paragraphs that follow, a handful of Canadians - all of whose
    lives revolve around music - share their favourite songs of the season
    and their fondest musical memories of the Christmas celebrations of
    their youth.

    Debus's earliest Christmas memories centre on an 11th-century
    Romanesque cathedral in his hometown of Speyer, Germany.

    `It's a stunning, remarkable building,' he recalls. `Since I was 5, I
    was singing in the chorale there. My favourite Christmas music is
    Johann Sebastian Bach's Christmas Oratorio, which I often performed as
    a choir boy. That piece will never lose its power.'

    Among familiar Christian carols, he says he especially loves `Adeste Fideles.'

    Like Bareghamyan, Hungarian-born Michael Remenyi grew up under the
    long shadow of the Soviet Union, but he remembers Christmas as a happy
    and songful time.

    `If we start with childhood memories, music is as important as sights
    and sounds,' says Remenyi, an accomplished cellist and owner of the
    venerable House of Remenyi musical instrument shop across Bloor Street
    from the Royal Ontario Museum. `When you've played your first
    Christmas carol, you are in the Christmas spirit.'

    Music that spurs memories of Christmas for Remenyi includes Mozart's
    Coronation Mass in C as well as almost any choral work by 20th-century
    English composer John Ritter.

    `His choral music is just wonderful.'

    If you prefer a more contemporary take on Christmas music, then Mehta
    at the Royal Conservatory is happy to oblige.

    `My tastes are all over the map,' says the man in charge of organizing
    concerts at Koerner Hall.

    His all-time favourite Christmas song is perhaps best known as
    `Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire' - its formal title is `The
    Christmas Song' - as performed by late American crooner Nat King Cole.

    `To me, there's no better Christmas song than that,' he says, praising
    Cole's `butter voice.'

    Mehta recalls Christmas morning debates, when his mother would call
    for German lieder to be played on the stereo, while her son insisted
    on, oh, maybe `Santa Claus is Coming to TOWNEND' by Bruce Springsteen
    (`How cool is that?') or else an a capella number by The Sounds of
    Blackness, a U.S. gospel ensemble.

    `I had moved away from traditional Christmas carols,' he explains.

    Canadian mezzo-soprano Julie Nesrallah - host of the Tempo classical
    music show on CBC Radio 2 - agrees with Mehta on one musical point.
    She, too, claims `Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire' as her
    quintessential Christmas song. But she favours the Mel Torme version,
    which she used as a model when she first performed the piece in a
    school choir as a child of Christian Lebanese immigrants in Ottawa.

    `Out of the blue, this Lebanese kid with big hair belts it out,' she
    says, referring to herself. `It's been on my list of faves ever since.
    My next favourite, I would say, is `O Holy Night' sung by Luciano
    Pavarotti. It is moving. Oh, my God.'

    Surprisingly, no one has yet mentioned that perennial musical emissary
    of Xmas, Handel's Messiah. So it's a good thing that Gabriel Radford
    is on the line. He claims the Christmas staple as his No. 1 seasonal
    favourite.

    `Handel's Messiah and Christmas are totally inseparable,' says
    Radford, who plays French horn in the Toronto Symphony Orchestra.
    `Hearing music from The Messiah instantly puts me in the Christmas
    mood.'

    On Christmas Day itself, however, Radford favours traditional carols
    (`Nothing replaces them'), with one modern addition - an album by U.S.
    jazz diva Ella Fitzgerald called Ella Wishes You a Swinging Christmas.

    `Ella is awesome,' says Radford. `That album is really great.'

    Soprano Lorna MacDonald, who teaches music at the University of
    Toronto, has two favourite carols, one of them familiar - `Away in a
    Manger' - and one of them less so. The unfamiliar piece is entitled
    `See, Amid the Winter Snow,' and it has a lovely, haunting melody.

    `Majestic,' she calls it.

    And, like Radford, MacDonald is a grateful devotee of George Frideric
    Handel's greatest gift to the Christmas season.

    `I can't imagine a Christmas without listening to The Messiah.'

    Fortunately, she doesn't have to.

    http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/music/article/1305223--christmas-songs-musicians-share-favourites-from-nat-king-cole-to-the-messiah

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