I thought I should finish my Easter sequence of music with my favourite Easter Carol. There’s something about this one that has always spoken to me, even in my pagan / agnostic days. The harmonies are beautiful and haunting, the melody has a lovely simplicity to it, and the words are just gorgeous. And maybe a trifle pagan in a Corn God sort of way (looking at you, James Fraser), though I rather think that’s a deliberate subversion of the pagan imagery on the part of the poet.
(Much like the way the early Church subverted large chunks of existing pagan festivals into their holy day celebrations. There’s this fabulous letter from one of the early Popes that basically tells missionaries that if the people are used to having a feast on this day, you should let them have the feast, and dedicate it to a saint, and if they are used to worshiping in this place, you should dedicate the place, and call it a church. He doesn’t *quite* say that they’ll never notice the difference, but there is definitely the implication that if you let them keep all their other habits, you’ll be able to quietly slip in the Christianity without anyone getting upset…)
But I digress…
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=27p98aLPZPI&w=420&h=315] Continue reading