America Media
It’s the most wonderful time of the year! The cookies, the mistletoe, the lights...oh, and the music! For Christians, Christmas carols mark a season of hope and the celebration of Jesus’ birth. Even in popular culture, these iconic jingles capture a warmth, a cheer and a nostalgia that transcends religious belonging. But where do these beloved yuletide songs come from? What inspired the people who composed them? How did they become popular and even mainstream? And what impact do their ancient Christian messages have on an increasingly post-Christian culture? America Media presents “Hark!” a podcast on the meaning and the making of our most beloved Christmas carols and their time-honored traditions.
5d ago
Did you know that when a ewe rejects her newborn lamb, the shepherd has only hours to convince her to nurse it—or the lamb will die? This is the work of shepherds—staying awake through the night when lambs are being born, watching closely, ready to step in and save them. It gives new meaning to the good shepherd. In this episode, host Maggi Van Dorn travels to a farm in Herefordshire, near the Welsh border, to understand shepherding, and discovers why God might have chosen shepherds to be the first to hear the good news. But shepherding is not all Maggi learned about for this episode. She has a firsthand learning experience too. After 30 years, she once again took up the fiddle, working with her teacher to discover why “The First Noel”—with its simple, stepwise melody—is the perfect carol for those just starting out or returning to music. She speaks with: Luke Timothy Johnson , a leading scholar of Luke’s Gospel and former Benedictine monk, on why God announces the incarnation first to shepherds—the poor and overlooked—who notice what others miss. Colin Britt , conductor and director of choral activities at Mount Holyoke College, on the word “Noel” (or “Nowell” in its original Cornish spelling) and why this carol’s repetitive structure helped it survive and spread through folk tradition. Austen Ivereigh , a papal biographer and writer who, with his wife Linda, tends sheep on a regenerative farm in Herefordshire, on what it takes to care for a flock and keep vigil through the night awaiting birth. The music featured in this episode was generously gifted to “Hark!” Our thanks to Colin Britt , Matt Isaac , The Grant High School Royal Blues directed by John Eisemann, Quincas Moreira , Salt of the Sound , The Maine All-Student Theater Project , Tony Alonso and GIA Publications , and Maggi’s fiddle teacher Nic Coker . Our theme music was produced by Frank Tuson . Want short, inspiring Bible reflections every day during Advent and Christmas? This year, our Scripture Reflections are free for Hark! listeners—sign up at AmericaMagazine.org/hark . Love a good holiday brain-teaser? Our weekly Christmas carol trivia is exclusively for America subscribers. Take the quiz here! Or visit, AmericaMagazine.org/hark . Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dec 7
We often imagine angels as gentle and serene. But in Scripture they arrive in blinding light and overwhelming sound—so much so that their first words are almost always “Do not be afraid.” These are the messengers who burst into the night sky to meet a group of poor, worn-out shepherds—outsiders who become the first to hear the news of Christ’s birth. “Angels We Have Heard on High” draws us into that holy night. Encounters with the divine rarely stay within the bounds of one language, and this carol embodies that truth. Born in French, welcomed into English, yet always held by one steady constant: the Latin refrain “Gloria in excelsis Deo.” According to French legend, shepherds sang that proclamation from field to field on Christmas Eve, their voices reaching person to person, place to place, echoing the angels announcing Christ’s birth to all. Maggi speaks with: Candida Moss , the Edward Cadbury Professor of Theology at the University of Birmingham, who explains why angels in Scripture inspire awe and fear, how the idea of guardian angels emerged later in Christian history and why God chose marginalized shepherds as the first recipients of the good news. Christopher Walker , an internationally renowned Los Angeles-based composer, conductor, choir director and liturgist, returns to his hometown in Bristol, England, where he directed music at Clifton Cathedral for years. From a friend’s recording studio, he deconstructs the carol’s musical architecture, showing how a single word in the Latin refrain unfurls across sixteen soaring notes to evoke the motion, echo and lift of angels in flight. Our thanks in this episode go to Armonico Consort; Vox Turturis and Andrew Gant of Signum Records ; the Choir of King's College, Cambridge ; Ricardo da Silva, S.J.; Derek Fiechter ; the Gothard Sisters ; Richard Gilewitz; Malukah ; The Grant High School Royal Blues and John Eisemann; The Roches ; Christopher Walker and OCP ; Simon Wester ; John Weston; and Anna, Fae, Frank and Genevieve Tuson. Our theme music was produced by Frank Tuson . Want short, inspiring Bible reflections every day during Advent and Christmas? This year, our Scripture Reflections are free for Hark! listeners—sign up at AmericaMagazine.org/hark . Love a good holiday brain-teaser? Our weekly Christmas carol trivia is exclusively for America subscribers. Take the quiz here! Or visit, AmericaMagazine.org/hark . Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nov 30
Most Christmas carols celebrate the birth of Jesus. But not “The Coventry Carol,” the premiere episode of “Hark!” season five. This song centers on a biblical horror: the “massacre of the innocents,” King Herod’s order to kill all male babies two years old and under in Bethlehem. It’s a lullaby sung by mothers to children who may not survive the night. In this episode, host Maggi Van Dorn travels to Coventry, England, to trace how this centuries-old lament survived the Reformation, a devastating library fire and the 1940 bombing of Coventry Cathedral during the Second World War— and how it has served the city’s witness to grief and reconciliation. She speaks with: - Rev. Richard Cooke , an Anglican priest in the Diocese of Coventry, who unpacks the carol’s scriptural and early historical roots. - Malvern Carvell , a local historian with deep family ties to Coventry, who walks her through the cathedral ruins and the city’s medieval past. - Rev. Kate Massey , the cathedral’s minister for arts and reconciliation, who reflects on the carol’s spiritual power and Coventry's enduring commitment to reconciliation - Rachel Mahon , the cathedral’s director of music—and the first woman to serve as organist at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London—who walks Maggi through the carol’s uneven rhythms and haunting modal lines In a BBC broadcast from Coventry Cathedral’s ruins after Germany’s bombing Blitz, against England, Provost Richard Howard urged the nation to “build a kinder, more Christ-childlike world,” even with years of war still ahead. Hope had to begin in the rubble—a reminder that this lullaby carries us through Advent into Christmas not by turning from the world’s pain, but by singing through it together. Want short, inspiring Bible reflections every day during Advent and Christmas? This year, our Scripture Reflections are free for Hark! listeners—sign up at AmericaMagazine.org/hark . Love a good holiday brain-teaser? Our weekly Christmas carol trivia is exclusively for America subscribers. Take the first quiz here! Or visit, https://www.americamagazine.org/hark The music featured in this episode was generously gifted to “Hark!” Our thanks to James Bilodeau, The King’s Singers and Signum Records , Brad Prevedoros , Matthew Pierce , Avaendil , Brian Thiessen , Cynthia Boener , Salt of the Sound , the Coventry Cathedral Girls’ Choir and the Choir of King’s College, Cambridge . Our theme music was produced by Frank Tuson . Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dec 15, 2024
On the final episode of Hark! this season, prepare yourselves for a wee bit of scandal because we’re looking at a tune that began as a bawdy love song and has long been associated with an evil monarch, but which, over the course of three centuries, finds its redemption as a Christmas carol. This is the story behind, “What Child Is This?” Please complete our brief survey to share your hopes for Hark! and to let us know which carols you’d love us to feature next year. “What Child Is This” may have been derived from a Christmas poem by William Chatteron Dix in the mid 19th century, but its musical roots stretch as far back as the 16th century, when its famous tune, “Greensleeves,” was circulated in Europe’s royal courts. In an attempt to track the tune’s composer, and separate fact from fiction, Maggi Van Dorn brings on Milton Mermikides, the 37th Gresham Professor of Music at Gresham College, London. Maggi is then joined by Richard Jeffrey-Gray, head of the music service for the Diocese of Clifton, Bristol, United Kingdom, who traces how the romantic ballad “Greensleeves” became the Christmas carol “What Child Is This,” along with what makes this, according to Richard, “one of the most, perfect tunes to to play and to sing.” Susan Reynolds, a theologian at the Candler School of Theology at Emory University and mom of three girls, unpacks the rhetorical structure of the song’s lyrics and its profound theological implications for our world today. The music featured on this episode was generously gifted to Hark! by Clifton Cathedral Choi r, Bristol, U.K.; Nicholas Steinbach and Grey Duck Music ; Holland Albright ; Cynthia Boener ; Michael Logozar and Brian Thiessen . With special thanks to Signum Records for providing renditions of the carol "What Child Is This" by the following artists signed to their label: King’s Singers , Armonico Consort , Matthew Barley and The London Cello Sound , featuring the 40 cellos of the London Philharmonic, Royal Philharmonic, BBC Symphony, and Philharmonia Orchestras. Support Hark! by becoming a digital subscriber to America Magazine at: americamagazine.org/subscribe This season of Hark! is sponsored by Saints for Sinners, offering divine saint medals imported from Italy and meticulously hand-painted in New Orleans. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dec 8, 2024
If you’re in search of an ancient, theologically rich carol this season, look no further than “Of the Father’s Love Begotten.” Long before it became a Christmas carol in the 19th century, this hymn was first penned as a poem in the 4th century by Aurelius Clemens Prudentius. As Brian Flanagan , theologian and church historian, explains, this was a time of significant turmoil in church history, with Christian doctrine being defined and refined through heated debates and councils. Prudentius’ poetry appears to have been a creative way of conveying some of the core teachings that emerged from the Council of Nicaea in 325 A.D. to the faithful. The elegant verse was later paired with a Eucharistic hymn, thought to be from either the 10th or 13th century, and translated by the renowned Victorian composer John Mason Neale. This poem-hymn has thus endured over 1,500 years of history, proclaiming the mystery of the incarnation that we celebrate at Christmas. Host Maggi Van Dorn also welcomes back Colin Britt to help us appreciate the musical subtleties of this great work, and best-selling writer and novelist Nicole Baart shares why she chose to sing this carol on her wedding day. We owe a great debt of thanks to Richard Jeffrey Gray and the members of the Clifton Cathedral Choir , accompanied by Stephen Bryant and directed by Dr. David Bednall ; the Schola Cantorum of St. Peter’s in the Loop, directed by J. Michael Thompson ; the Mount Holyoke Glee Club , conducted by Colin Britt ; and Lori Pappajohn and Ricardo da Silva, S.J., for providing the music featured in this episode. The show wraps with “Of the Father’s Heart Begotten,” arranged by Sir David Willcocks and performed by the Choir of King’s College , Cambridge, under the direction of Daniel Hyde. This recording is included on their album In the Bleak Midwinter , available through King’s Recordings. Support Hark! by becoming a digital subscriber to America Magazine at: americamagazine.org/subscribe This season of Hark! is sponsored by Saints for Sinners, offering divine saint medals imported from Italy and meticulously hand-painted in New Orleans. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dec 2, 2024
On this episode of “Hark!”, we follow the beat of a modern carol that has gained worldwide fame, yet was composed almost while napping. It is a tale about a figure the Bible never mentions, but whose bold gift leads us straight to the heart of Christmas. This is the story of “The Little Drummer Boy.” First, Lisa Graham , the director of the choral program and a senior lecturer in music at Wellesley College, narrates how Wellesley alumna Katherine Kennicott Davis composed her “Carol of the Drum” in 1941 and how the college bid $11,000 in a battle to win the rights to the original manuscript. Research historian Christian McWhirter , then unpacks the much-romanticized symbol of the drummer boy on the battlefield during the American Civil War. Finally, host Maggi Van Dorn, takes a music lesson with the incomparable liturgical composer, Christopher Walker , also the author of 12 books of stories and songs for children. We are most grateful to our real-life drummer boy, Garrin Knapp, for interpreting and demoing the percussion elements of the carol, and for sharing what the song means to him. The soul-stirring solo of “The Little Drummer Boy" heard on this episode was specially recorded for “Hark!” by Frank Tuson , our very own sound engineer and composer of our theme score. The show wraps with a performance by The King’s Singers from their Christmas album, courtesy of Signum Records. Midway through production on this episode, Hurricane Helene made landfall in Western North Carolina, where Maggi has called home for four years. This episode is dedicated to the ongoing relief efforts in the affected areas. Please consider making a donation to these reputable organizations: BeLoved Asheville: a non-profit organization that has been boots on the ground since long before the hurricane and which will serve those on the margins long after. ReString Appalachia: a movement dedicated to getting quality instruments back in the hands of those who lost them in the hurricane. Support Hark! by becoming a digital subscriber to America Magazine at: americamagazine.org/subscribe Please donate for Giving Tuesday! From all of us at America Media, thank you! This season of Hark! is sponsored by Saints for Sinners, offering divine saint medals imported from Italy and meticulously hand-painted in New Orleans. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nov 29, 2024
To kick off the fourth season of “Hark! The stories behind our favorite Christmas carols” we’re embarking on an adventure to learn about an American-born carol that features some classic nativity characters—figures that, though very familiar to us, we know little about. It’s a Christmas song that begins on a plodding, somber note and erupts into a thrilling epiphany. We’re exploring “We Three Kings.” To help us understand who the magi were—at least from the perspective of Matthew’s Gospel— host Maggi Van Dorn invites Eric Vanden Eykel , author of The Magi: Who They Are, How They’ve Been Remembered, and Why They Still Fascinate and Associate Professor of Religious Studies at Ferrum College. The magi’s gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh have long been viewed as symbolic of Jesus’ kingship, divinity and humanity, but how were these two herbs used in antiquity? Maggi learns about their earliest uses from Emiliana Patrick , a fourth year doctoral student in Classical Chinese Medicine at Daoist Traditions College in Asheville, North Carolina. To trace the star the magi followed, Maggi turns to the director of the Vatican’s observatory, Guy Consolmagno, S.J., a Jesuit brother. Finally, to better appreciate the musical genius of the carol’s composition, she speaks with ContraForce , a folk metal band known for their eclectic range of musical styles at contra dances, who specially created an instrumental rendition of “We Three Kings,”specially for “Hark!,” that is woven throughout the episode. The music featured in this episode is courtesy of ContraForce , Michael Logozar , Cynthia Boener , Dante Bucci, the Lee siblings of the Seasons band , Jeff Black and Lotos Nile Music. Special thanks to Jim Bilodeau, our sound engineer, and Jonathan Reid Gealt for lending their vocal talent. Support Hark! by becoming a digital subscriber to America Magazine at: americamagazine.org/subscribe Please donate for Giving Tuesday! From all of us at America Media, thank you! This season of Hark! is sponsored by Saints for Sinners, offering divine saint medals imported from Italy and meticulously hand-painted in New Orleans. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dec 17, 2023
Our final episode of Hark! this season departs from the usual nativity of Christ in a manger, surrounded by shepherds and angels on high. Instead, our carol centers on the singular icon of a rose. “Lo, How a Rose E’er Blooming” is a German Christmas song, first published in a Lutheran hymnbook in 1599. Although its believed to be much older, originating in a Catholic monastery with an uncertain date and writer. And not only do we not know who wrote the text for our carol. The person behind the basic melody is also a mystery. The music is often credited to Michael Praetorius, a German composer, organist and music theorist from the 16th and 17th Centuries. But, Praetorius didn't compose the main melody; he only added the harmonies that have made this “the rose of all carols” among choristers and music maestros. Adding further to the mystery of this carol, the symbol of the rose is ambiguous. Depending on the translation and verse, the rose could represent Jesus or his mother Mary, who in Catholic mysticism is adorned with roses. Our heartfelt thanks extends to every musician, choir and soloist who gifted their music so generously to Hark! this season. On this episode we are especially grateful to: The Choir of King’s College Cambridge , The Ignatian Schola , Cynthia Boener , Katie Green and Karen Hefford , Barbara Rowe for sharing the music of her husband, the late Bryan Rowe , Gary Cope and the Encomium Ensemble , the music department of Hope College in Holland, Michigan, Stephen Lynerd , Winter Harp and The Notre Dame Folk Choir , under the direction of JJ Wright , who walked us through the music of “Lo How A Rose” on this episode. Special thanks to the Benedictine monks of Saint John's Abbey Schola in Collegeville, Minnesota. In particular to Father Nick Kleespie who coordinated the performance of Father Anthony Ruff's arrangement of “Lo, How a Rose,” featured in this episode. To learn more about the monks of Saint John’s Abbey, please visit saintjohnsabbey.org . Support “Hark!” become a digital subscriber of America Magazine at: https://link.chtbl.com/04Jrg99F Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices