Today’s carol is going to surprise anyone who is familiar with my usual tastes in music. The composer is actually younger than I am and this piece of music may even have been composed in the current millennium, which makes it a good 400 years newer than the majority of this playlist. It’s actually the kind of music that I really don’t like singing, because it has odd, atonal harmonies and it’s hard to know where it will go next, and if you are an alto, you are probably singing G most of the time.
But it’s a very pretty setting of this carol for all that, and it makes me realise how even classical music goes in cycles – while it definitely has a 20th / 21st century feel, there is something medieval in the harmonics; they have that starkness that comes from open fourths and fifths, and there are bits of plainchant-inspired unison. Even the dissonances feel archaic rather than supermodern.
And, as I’m sure I’ve mentioned before, I do like Mary songs best when they are sung by female voices. It feels more fitting, and I think they sound better.
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qad5qfgG26g&w=560&h=315]
[…] text dates from a 15th-century manuscript (from which the lyrics to Adam Lay Y Bounden and I sing of a Maiden also derive), but there is no known tune for it. Yesterday’s setting was a traditional […]