词条 | Corpus Christi Carol | ||
释义 |
Corpus Christi Carol is a Middle or Early Modern English hymn (or carol), first found by an apprentice grocer named Richard Hill in a manuscript written around 1504. The original writer of the carol remains anonymous. The earliest surviving record of the piece preserves only the lyrics and is untitled. It has survived in altered form in the folk tradition as the Christmas carol "Down In Yon Forest". The structure of the carol is six stanzas, each with rhyming couplets. The tense changes in the fourth stanza from past to present continuous. MeaningOne hypothesis about the meaning of the carol is that it is concerned with the legend of the Holy Grail. In Arthurian traditions of the Grail story, the Fisher King is the knight who is the Grail's protector, and whose legs are perpetually wounded.[1] When he is wounded his kingdom suffers and becomes a wasteland. This would explain the reference to "an orchard brown". {{cn|date=July 2015}} One recent interpretation is that it was composed about the execution of Anne Boleyn, wife of Henry VIII, whose badge was a falcon.[1] In musicThe solo version of the Christi Carol was arranged for and dedicated to John Hahessy ( John Elwes ). He recorded the song in 1961 with Benjamin Britten himself at the piano. The song was included in a record with a group of other Britten songs taken from a set of children's songs entitled Friday Afternoons, also the title of the disc, which were composed for his brother who was a school teacher. Peter Warlock used the carol in composition and applied it to those that died at war in 1919. Benjamin Britten used it in the fifth variation of "A Boy was Born" (Choral Variations For Mixed Voices), Opus 3, in 1933. The text was combined with Christina Rossetti's "In the Bleak Midwinter". Harrison Birtwistle combined it with "O my deir hert, young Jesus sweit" by James, John and Robert Wedderburn in his "Monody for Corpus Christi", for soprano, flute, violin and horn, in 1959. John Gerrish wrote an arrangement for it in 1957, titled "The Falcon." Ian Read's English Neo-folk band Fire + Ice, performs a version of this song on their 1992 album Gilded by the SunSinger-songwriter Jeff Buckley included his interpretation of Britten's work on his debut 1994 album, Grace. About his version Buckley said, "The 'Carol' is a fairytale about a falcon who takes the beloved of the singer to an orchard. The singer goes looking for her and arrives at a chamber where his beloved lies next to a bleeding knight and a tomb with Christ's body in it."[2] Scottish singer-songwriter Archie Fisher performs a version of this song, "Looly, Looly", on his album Will Ye Gang, Love (1994) It has been set for unaccompanied choir by Norwegian composer Trond Kverno in 1995. John Fleagle recorded a version set to a Breton tune as “The Hern” in his album World's Bliss: Medieval Songs of Love and Death. The carol is featured in The Choirboys's album, The Choirboys, released in 2005. In 2007 it was sung in Season 1, Episode 2 of the drama on Showtime, The Tudors. French singer and harpist Cécile Corbel also performed a version of this carol on her third album, Songbook Vol.2, released in 2008. New Zealand soprano Hayley Westenra sings this on her album Winter Magic, released in November 2009. The Chapel choir of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge recorded a choral version of the Corpus Christi Carol on their 2009 album, Ave Virgo.[3] English guitarist Jeff Beck performs his interpretation on his 2010 album, Emotion & Commotion. In the album liner notes, Beck states that Jeff Buckley inspired his cover of this piece: "When I heard Jeff Buckley's album, the simplicity and the beauty of the way he sounded amazed me."[4] The carol is featured in Libera's album, The Christmas Album, released in 2011. The carol appears on the album "Of Kings And Angels" by Mediaeval Baebes. The Britten setting is featured in Voces8's album, Eventide, released in 2014. In 2015 the Chapel choir of Corpus Christi College, Oxford recorded a choral version, with a setting written by the then senior organ scholar Peter Ladd. Lyrics
References1. ^1 Independent article {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070115050945/http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/this_britain/article2087868.ece |date=15 January 2007 }} 2. ^Jeff Buckley FAQ {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060508002054/http://jeffbuckley.com/rfuller/buckley/faq/13grace.html |date=8 May 2006 }} 3. ^http://www.discovery-records.com/product-ST59673/Choir-Of-Corpus-Christi-College-Cam.htm 4. ^(2010) Album notes for Emotion & Commotion by Jeff Beck [booklet]. Rhino Records (523695). 5. ^Ed. Dyboski, Roman, PhD. Songs, Carols, and other Miscellaneous Poems, from the Balliol MS. 354, Richard Hill’s Commonplace-Book. 1907. 4 : English Christian hymns|Compositions by Benjamin Britten|Middle English poems|Jeff Buckley songs |
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