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  • Procession
  • Wolcum Yole!
  • There Is No Rose
  • That Yonge Child
  • Balulalow
  • As Dew In Aprille
  • This Little Babe
  • Interlude
  • In Freezing Winter Night
  • Spring Carol
  • Deo Gracias
  • Recession

A Ceremony of Carols op. 28. ((1942, rev. 1943) SSA and Harp or Piano). By Benjamin Britten (1913-1976). For Choral, Chorus, Harp, Piano (SSA). BH Large Choral. Sacred, Christmas. 72 pages. Boosey & Hawkes #M060014109. Published by Boosey & Hawkes (HL.48008894).

for boys' or female voices and harp (piano in extremis but with alterations and omissions)

There is also a version for SATB and harp arranged by Julius Harrison

Texts: Latin and English

1. Procession (using a variant of the Magnificat antiphon for the second Vespers of the Nativity of Our Lord)

2. Wolcum Yole! (anon.)

3. There is no rose (anon.)

4a. That yongë child (anon.)

4b. Balulalow (James, John and Robert Wedderburn)

5. As dew in Aprille (anon.)

6. This little babe (Robert Southwell)

7. Interlude (harp solo)

8. In Freezing Winter Night (Robert Southwell)

9. Spring Carol (William Cornish)

10. Deo gracias (anon.)

11. Recession (as for Procession)

Publisher: Boosey & Hawkes

Difficulty level: 3

The Ceremony of Carols is one of Britten's best-known and most-performed works. It is a brilliantly conceived and dramatic concert work which sees the voices process to their places singing unaccompanied plainsong and, at the end, processing out again to the same chant. These movements can also be accompanied but strictly only if the voices do not process. The final Alleluia can be repeated as many times as necessary to get the singers to and from their destination.

The carols are for three-part children's voices (though, of course they can be sung by female adults as well) and they form a two-part work around a central Interlude for harp which is based on the plainsong from the Procession. Variety is the key word here as all the carols have such individual identities. The forthright Wolcum Yole!, the deliciously lyrical There is no Rose, the swinging Balulalow, the fiery and dramatic This little Babe all contribute to a work which is a feast of discovery throughout. Lovely solos and duos add further colour and the harp part, an inspired choice of accompaniment, enriches, colours and surrounds the voices with its pictorial musical imagery. If anything shows Britten's genius for writing for voices it must be this work.

The challenges here are in creating a real equality between voice parts, fielding a confident pair of soloists, and making the most of the wonderfully colourful poems Britten has chosen to set. Pronunciation is not really an issue, but when I recorded this work with the Finzi Singers I decided to follow the example of Sacred and Profane and use authentic medieval pronunciation for which an expert coach was necessary. It brings an added element of colour to a familiar aural experience.

Duration: 22 minutes

Paul Spicer, Lichfield, 2011.

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Ratings + Reviews

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Based on 2 Reviews

5 star rating

Difficulty Level:
Intermediate/advanced

May 29, 2011

A Ceremony of Carols

PERFECT. This is one of the most lovely pieces and gorgeous for the right core group of women to perform.

24 of 50 people found this review helpful.

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5 star rating

Location: from The Aland Islands Finland

Difficulty Level:
Intermediate/advanced

October 19, 2007

simply exquisite

Our ladies enemble performed this work Christmas 2003 and received such rave reviews that this has become a Christmas standard for us. The harp is such a magical instrument and adds a welcome change to the standard Christmas repetoir.

33 of 70 people found this review helpful.

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