BBC Four Related CDs & DVDs

COR16094 Sacred Music: A Christmas History
Documentary and Concert from St Augustine's, London (Single DVD)
Price: £15.00
Overview
Harry Christophers and The Sixteen join Simon Russell Beale for two special Christmas programmes that look beyond the familiar carols and festive songs to reveal two millennia of music and texts from across Europe.
A CHRISTMAS HISTORY
Simon Russell Beale takes a journey through Italy, Britain, Germany and Austria as he explores how the sound of Christmas has evolved in response to changing ideas about the Nativity. His story takes us through two millennia of music, from a fragment of papyrus preserving the earliest known piece of Christian music to the stories behind Hark! the herald angels sing, Silent Night and In the bleak midwinter, and the work of popular Christmas composer, John Rutter all performed by Harry Christophers and The Sixteen.
A CHORAL CHRISTMAS
Simon Russell Beale introduces a programme of choral music for Christmas from across the centuries, featuring performances of some of the works featured in the accompanying documentary. Harry Christophers and The Sixteen, perform music including J.S. Bach's harmonisation of the medieval carol In dulci jubilo, A spotless rose by Herbert Howells and the Christmas text O magnum mysterium, set as a motet by Tomás Luis de Victoria.
Including Bonus Features:
Sacred Music Series One and
An Easter Celebration DVD trailers
7 Bonus Audio Tracks taken from a selection of The Sixteen’s celebrated Christmas CDs
Related Recordings by The Sixteen
Artist Biographies and Images
Track Listings
Concert Programme:
Medieval carol
1. Make we joy
G.P. da Palestrina
2. Hodie Christus natus est
Tomás Luis de Victoria
3. O magnum mysterium
Medieval carol / J.S. Bach
4. In dulci jubilo
Medieval carol
5. There is no rose
William Walton
6. Make we joy now in this fest
Felix Mendelssohn
7. Hark! The herald angels sing
Herbert Howells
8. A spotless rose
Gustav Holst
9. In the bleak midwinter
Peter Maxwell Davies
10. O magnum mysterium
Franz Xaver Gruber
11. Stille nacht







