I didn't
want to review a new band today because of the holiday, but I do have something
musical to write about.
About six
years ago they had a Christmas sing-along at church that we really loved. They
projected the lyrics overhead, so you didn't have to know the words. This is
important, because a lot of people only know the openings of Christmas songs. There
was a funny Saturday Night Live sketch about that where at the interfaith
basketball league awards dinner they were trying to sing a carol together. After
several false starts only the rabbi (as played by Elliott Gould) was able to
sing one through to the end.
Our
sing-along had a mix of hymns and traditional songs, and they did add in the
Hallelujah Chorus, parts of which were hard to sing, but there were parts that
went well enough that everyone could feel pretty good about it.
It was so
much fun. We had a great time ourselves, and we invited a friend that we
started hanging out with more after, so it was a good evening all around. We
hoped they would do it every year.
They
changed it. The next year they had what they called a Creche and Carol, where
they had various Nativity displays around the building, and different soloists
and musical groups performed. Apparently there was some singing along incorporated,
but we never went.
Julie asked
about it this year, and they had talked about doing something more like the
sing-along again. One thing I understood with the other once is that you get
higher attendance because more people have assignments. Not only do you get
everyone who is signed up to sing, but the various people who would come to
hear them sing, and then they hear the other people too.
Julie made
it clear that this did not interest her at all. I don't know if that is why they
went for a straight sing-along again. I tend to think so, but it may have just
been time for a change. They announced it, we were excited, and we went.
The program
made me grumpy. There were all of these soloists and instrumental performers
and bell ringers listed. I suppose part of that was to increase the involvement
again, but also, the part that made me grumpy was this incessant need to make
things fancier.
That came
through in some of the singing parts too. Here we will have you sing the
melody, and here parts. Just sopranos here. Just men here. Those arrangements
can sound good, but when you have people being guided and practicing them, it
works better then it does in an unrehearsed setting. Also, singing parts takes
all the joy out of singing for me. This is not the time to be fancy!
There are
two things I need to point out about this. One is that it was still fun. Not
quite as fun as if they didn't do all that, but there was still quite a bit of
singing, and just singing without having to worry about parts is a very joyful
thing. People should do that more. Maybe I need to organize my own sing-along.
The other
thing came up on one of the songs. It was listed as a round, which I did not
object to. I was thinking it would be "Christmas Bells Are Ringing"
as covered by Nat King Cole, but it was a primary song I was unfamiliar with.
The round
was okay, but I started thinking how a round could really work on the one I did
know, and then I started thinking about what if instead of just the traditional
round, the first groups started repeating the last lines, so at the end it was
everyone singing "Ding, Dong, Ding, Dong, Christmas Bells are Ringing"
really loud and full. So now I was doing it!
I hadn't
realized how insidious getting fancy with Christmas music is.
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