The Joy of Christmas
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Average customer review:Track Listing
- O Come All Ye Faithful
- Twelfth Night Song
- Away in a Manger
- Carol of the Bells
- Animal Carol
- Twelve Days of Christmas
- O Little Town of Bethlehem
- Pat-A-Pan
- Joy the the World
- Lullay, My Liking (I Saw a Maiden)
- God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen
- La Virgen Lava Pañales
- Deck the Halls With Boughs of Holly
- Joseph Lieber, Joseph Mein (Joseph Dearest, Joseph Mine)
- Once In Royal David's City
- Stille Nacht
- Overture. Allegro Giusto
- Tempo Di Marcia Viva [March]
- Dance de la Fée Dragée (Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy) . Andante ...
- Danse Russe - Trépak (Russian Dance) . Tempo Di Trepak, Molto Vivace
- Danse Arabe (Arab Dance) [Allegretto]
- Danse Chinoise (Chinese Dance) [Allegro Moderato]
- Danse des Mirlitons (Dance of the Mirlitons) [Moderato Assai]
- "Children's Prayer" from Hansel and Gretel
- Hallelujah Chorus
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #89390 in Music
- Released on: 1997-09-16
- Number of discs: 1
Customer Reviews
One of THE classic Christmas LPs of all time...
Remember the "Andre" champagne commercial from the 70s? The one featuring a recording of "Carol of the Bells" and quick shots of people ringing in the new year? Well that recording of Carol of the Bells is the definitive version (in my book anyway). And it is featured on the 1997 Sony reissue of the "The Joy of Christmas" featuring the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and the New York Philharmonic conducted by the great Leonard Bernstein. This is one of THE classic holiday LPs, beautifully remastered for CD. In addition to "Carol of the Bells" one of the best choral versions of "The Twelve Days of Christmas" (5+ minutes) is included here along with fourteen other traditional carols (no pop standards here).
These sixteen numbers from the original LP clock in at almost 50 minutes - a very generous recording time for an LP from 1963. Still Sony Classics decided to extend the reissue a bit and has added the following bonus tracks, all featuring Bernstein and the NY Philharmonic.
~ Selections from Tchaikovsky's Suite from the Nutcracker (recorded 1960): what you get is seven of the eight movements included in the suite - not sure why but the climax of the suite - the "Waltz of the Flowers" - is omitted.
~ A 1970 recording of the Children's Prayer from Humperdick's ballet "Hansel and Gretel", a quite movement of gentle lyricism.
~ To close the program a 1956 recording for the "Hallelujah Chorus" from Handel's "Messiah". Again Bernstein conducts the NY Philharmonic, but instead of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir the singing is provided by the Westminster Choir. It's a splendid performance.
The bonus material provides an additional 23+ minutes of wonderful music to bring this recording up to a total 74 minutes. In a world of 30 minute Christmas CDs this is a wonderful release and should be in the collection of every Christmas music lover.
I was there....
In August or September of 1963 I received a call from my high school music teacher. They were looking for a small audience to act as acoustic padding to soak up some of the reverberation of the Salt Lake Tabernacle. Get down there quick, he said, Bernstein's recording with the Choir. I went and sat through the first of two sessions for this recording. It was fascinating. Bernstein came out and greeted us remarking that he always remembered his concert in the Tabernacle because "it was the loudest applause he had ever heard" (the Tabernacle itself lending to that amplification). He launched right into "Joy to the World" making adjustments to the freshly finished arrangement. All the arrangers were present. The ink wasn't dry on their manuscripts. The NYP would sight read through them a couple of times, Bernstein would adjust, and they'd do a take or two. The Choir had been preparing for many weeks. The sessions weren't entirely smooth. Bernstein was an entirely different personality than their long experience with Ormandy had been. Bernstein demanded precision. He usually got it by the final take. The album was released in less then two months. Eventually it "went gold" -- unusual for 'classical' albums of the time. I started playing it in October, 1963. There hasn't been a Christmas since that these wonderful arrangements and the memories of that summer haven't graced our family's celebration. It's advent on CD was late but most welcome.
Bernstein and the Mo Tab Make Beautiful Music Together
This is a collaboration between Leonard Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic and the Mormon Tabernacle Choir made when each group was at the height of their recording careers. Truly majestic arrangements and a mix of classical music and traditional carols create a spine-tingling experience. I grew up listening to this album and for me it's as much a part of Christmas as the tree. A deeply rewarding album that may be, as others on this page have said, the greatest holiday classical music collection ever.




