Is there room at the inn for the Ambient Christmas Song?
I ask the question about the Ambient Christmas Song because I
believe this is a true genre of Christmas music. It is a needed genre in which more
composers and songwriters need to write/compose in.
The Ambient Christmas Songs are a few Christmas songs that
describe the present ambient of a “Christmas time and space.”
Unlike other Christmas songs, there is no dreaming or
telling someone they will be home. It is not a joy-luck song or carol.
It’s as if a person was sitting in a Lazy-Boy at the family Christmas
gathering and just observing. What he/she observes is described in poetic
detail filling the listener with warmth.
Of course, the king of these Ambient Christmas Songs, is the
appropriately named “The Christmas Song” written and composed by Mel Torme and Robert
Wells.
In “The Christmas Song,” the narrator is describing the “now,”
talking about “Chestnuts roasting on an open fire.” He describes the cold, the
sounds, the food, the décor, and the dress of people.
Chestnuts roasting on an open fire
Jack Frost nipping at your nose
Yuletide carols being sung by a choir
And folks dressed up like Eskimos
The narrator goes on to describe the children, “their eyes
all aglow,” and describes what is in the thoughts of these children. Again, it
is like one is sitting in the corner at your Christmas party observing.
Everybody
knows a turkey and some mistletoe
Help to make the season bright
Tiny tots with their eyes all aglow
Will find it hard to sleep tonight
“Christmas Walz” also does this, and deliberately. Frank
Sinatra asked Sammy Cahn for a song like “The Christmas Song,” one Sinatra
could make his own.
Again, the narrator is there -- in a certain time and space
-- observing:
Frosted windowpanes
Candles gleaming inside
Painted candy canes on the tree
Santa's on his way
He's filled his sleigh with things
Things for you and for me
Although that is the only descriptive part of the song, it
still works into describing the ambience of a solitary Christmas moment. “The
Christmas Waltz” is short. Just two stanzas, but it does its job.
“Christmas Eve” by Carleton Carpenter, most famously sung by
Billy Eckstine, is another:
There's a candle in the window
There's a legend we believe
Santa, here's our plea, you can bet that he
wouldn't miss a Christmas Eve
There's a stocking on the fireplace
There are presents to receive
And there's mistletoe, where is Romeo?
Steals a kiss on Christmas Eve
“Christmas Eve” should be more popular than it is. In this song, Carpenter’s lyrics describes what the narrator is seeing in the now: “candle in the window.”
He goes on to observe the décor, the presents, and the
mistletoe. Then, he gently moves on to describe the nativity scene in a refrain
which later repeats:
In the corner, on a table
Underneath a shining star
Is the holy Christmas stable
And three wise men from afar
There is always a final commentary and contemplations from the narrators to end
these songs. It’s like a “Merry Christmas” wish, a “Happy New Year,” something
more spiritual, saying it “many times, many ways.”
Torme and Wells say:
And so I'm offering this simple phrase
To kids from one to 92
Although it's been said many times, many ways
Merry Christmas to you
Sammy Cahn. in “Christmas Watz” give us:
It's that time of year when the world falls in love
Ev'ry song you hear seems to say "Merry Christmas,
"May your New Year dreams come true"
And this song of mine in three-quarter time
Wishes you and yours the same thing, too.
Carpenter closes “Christmas Eve” with a sort of peace on
earth, “wish Christmas can be everyday” request:
All this holiday contentment
All this love should never leave
We'd be doing right if we made each night
More like Christmas Eve
I do not put all songs in this category. I am sure there are
lesser-known Ambient Christmas Songs. These songs must be indoors. I do not
know why, but the Christmas party goer is observing. I know the chestnuts
roasting in “The Christmas Song” are roasting in an open fire. So maybe, it’s
outside, at least for that bit.
The Ambient Christmas Song remained largely an American
genre. This was at least until the 1980s when John Rutter, from across the pond
(UK), took a shot at it.
Take John Rutter’s “The Very Best Time of the Year” where he
starts with the ambient description and ends with the closing observance that
this is the “very best time of the year”:
Christmas trees and boughs of
holly,
Yuletide logs and mistletoe;
Candles burning bright, and
meadows frosty white,
And faces in the firelight′s glow;
Sounds of happy children's voices
Singing carols that you love to
hear;
Then the silence of the night
And the winter air so still and
clear.
Feels like you could reach and
touch the sky,
Or catch a star and fly away;
Feels like you could wish for
peace on earth,
And all at once it would come,
some day.
Families
and friends together
Feel
a special kind of love and cheer,
Sharing
all the joys of Christmas time,
The
very best time of year.
The
very best time,
That
strange, enchanted time,
That
shining, magic time of year.
In the John Rutter Christmas Album (Collegium Records, 2002), Rutter states in the liner notes, the American connections to this song.
Written in 1984 as a gift for two “noted American choral musicians who were among the first to welcome the composer into the American choral community….” Rutter’s song is written for chorus. The other Christmas Ambient Songs were written for solo voice but often performed by choirs: “Christmas Walz,” more true for “The Christmas Song.” I have only seen one choral performance of “Christmas Eve,” a video which I cannot find. However, the original recording by Eckstine has a chorus backing him.
"The Christmas Waltz" performed by the All-American Boy Choir.
I tried to find other examples. Malcolm Williamson’s “This
Christmas Night.” D. Fraser’s “This
Christmastide (Jessye’s Carol).” However, they do not match up.
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