"Bethlehem Down"is aChristmas carolforSATB choircomposed in 1927 by British composerPeter Warlock(1894–1930)—the pseudonym of Philip Arnold Heseltine.[a]It is set to a poem written by journalist and poetBruce Blunt(1899–1957). Warlock and Blunt wrote the carol to finance an "immortal carouse" (a heavy bout of drinking) over Christmas in 1927. The pair submitted the carol toThe Daily Telegraph's annual Christmas carol contest and won. It is characterised bymodalharmony withchromaticinflections. The musicologistBarry Smithdescribed "Bethlehem Down" as the finest of all of Warlock's choral music.
Bethlehem Down | |
---|---|
Key | D minor |
Period | Early 20th century |
Genre | Christmas carol |
Form | SATB choir |
Occasion | The Daily TelegraphChristmas carol competition |
Text | Bruce Blunt |
Melody | Peter Warlock |
Composed | 1927 |
Published | 24 December 1927 inThe Daily Telegraph |
Publisher | The Daily Telegraph(1927), Winthrop Rogers (1928) |
In 1930, Warlock composed anarrangementof "Bethlehem Down" for solo voice and keyboard accompaniment. It was the last piece of music that Warlock wrote, less than three weeks before he died. The solo arrangement uses the soprano line from the SATB version as its melody. It features more complex harmony than the choral arrangement, highlighting the text in a more sombre manner.
Context
editComposition
editPeter Warlock was a prolific composer of songs, with over 119 to his name. His choral music is less well-known, but within that genre, "Bethlehem Down" is one of Warlock's most famous carols.[2][3]The poet and journalist Bruce Blunt told the story behind the creation of "Bethlehem Down" in a letter toGerald Cockshott,dated 1943.[4]He said that he and Peter Warlock were short on money in the run up to Christmas in 1927, so they had the idea to write a Christmas carol together in the hopes it would be published and earn them enough money for alcohol (or as Blunt called it, an "immortal carouse" ).[2][5]Whilst on a night-time walk between two pubs—The Plough inBishops Suttonand The Anchor inRopley[6]—Blunt thought up the words to "Bethlehem Down". He sent the text to Warlock who set it to music within a few days. The completed carol was entered intoThe Daily Telegraph's Christmas carol competition and won.[7]It was published in the paper on 24 December 1927.[5][b]The carol would be published again the following year by Winthrop Rogers (nowBoosey & Hawkes).[9]Warlock and Blunt worked on other carols together, includingThe Frostbound Wood,[6]which was published in theRadio Timeson 20 December 1929.[10]
Solo arrangement
editIn 1930, Warlock arranged a solo version of "Bethlehem Down".[11]It was written especially for Arnold Dowbiggin to perform as part of a Christmas recital inLancaster Priory Church.[12]The musicologistBarry Smithwrites that in this late period of Warlock's life, he was feeling increasingly depressed.[13]Dowbiggin himself wrote that the solo arrangement of "Bethlehem Down" is "a source for sorrow".[14]The solo arrangement of "Bethlehem Down" was the last piece of music Warlock wrote,[13]less than three weeks before his death.[15]Dowbiggin said that he received the manuscript on the day that Warlock died.[14]
Composition
editChoral arrangement
editThe choral arrangement of "Bethlehem Down", written and published in 1927, is written for unaccompaniedSATBchoir. The piece is inD minorand 6/2time.It is characterised by long phrasing of lines with melancholicmodalharmony[16][17]in a largelyhomophonictexture.[15]Smith writes that the music complements the lyrics with a "finely-crafted melody" and "imaginative and sensitive harmony".[18]Chromaticismis used throughout the piece,[17]one example being theTudor-styledflattened seventhswhich populate the melody;[3]Ian Alfred Copley writes that this is a common recurringmotifin Warlock's music. A prominent example of a flattened seventh occurs in the soprano line of the fifth bar of each verse:[19]
Each verse ends with a phrase which Smith describes as "haunting".[3]
Solo arrangement
editIn the solo arrangement of "Bethlehem Down", the solo part uses the same melody as the SATB soprano line. The solo is accompanied by a new keyboard part[12]which can be performed by either piano or organ.[15]Trevor Holddescribes the keyboard accompaniment as more "intricate" than the SATB arrangement.[15]It features more complex harmony than the SATB version with additionalcounterpoint,differences in texture, and a passage linking penultimate and final verses—reminiscent of Warlock's other carol,Corpus Christi.[20]The solo arrangement accompaniment features what Copley calls the "gloom motif" —a motif used in other Warlock pieces consisting of a chromatic sequence played over apedal.Copley describes the motif as "desolate",[19]and Smith writes that the accompaniment as a whole "highlights the inherent sadness of Blunt's poem".[13]
Text
editSmith writes that, although Warlock was not religious and was anti-Christian, he liked thestory of Christmas.[21]Hold writes that Blunt's text takes an "oblique" approach to carol text, contrasting the Christmas story ( "Myrrh for its sweetness, and gold for a crown" ) with the later life of Jesus ( "Myrrh for embalming, and wood for a crown" ).[15]
When He is King we will give him the King's gifts,
Myrrh for its sweetness, and gold for a crown,
"Beautiful robes", said the young girl to Joseph
Fair with her first-born on Bethlehem Down.
Bethlehem Down is full of the starlight
Winds for the spices, and stars for the gold,
Mary for sleep, and for lullaby music
Songs of a shepherd by Bethlehem fold.
When He is King they will clothe Him in grave-sheets,
Myrrh for embalming, and wood for a crown,
He that lies now in the white arms of Mary
Sleeping so lightly on Bethlehem Down.
Here He has peace and a short while for dreaming,
Close-huddled oxen to keep Him from cold,
Mary for love, and for lullaby music
Songs of a shepherd by Bethlehem fold.
Reception
editSmith writes that "Bethlehem Down" is "surely the finest of all [Warlock's] choral works"[3]and a rare example of a modern carol which captures the essence of the genre.[18]The music criticWilfrid Mellersdescribed it as a small miracle.[21]Music journalist Alexandra Coghlan writes that the piece is Warlock's "unquestioned carol masterpiece",[22]and is particularly impressive given the fact its creation arose from the simple need for money and alcohol.[23]BBC Music Magazinewrites that the carol has a beautiful and sombre tone[24]which can act as a change in pace in carol services.[25]
See also
editReferences
editNotes
edit- ^Warlock first used this pseudonym in 1916 when publishing an article inThe Music Studentjournal.[1]
- ^TheTelegraphpublished Warlock's handwritten manuscript, featuring whatThe New Oxford Book of Carolsdescribes as "archaic diamond-headed notes."[8]
Citations
edit- ^Smith 1994a,p. 103.
- ^abSmith 1994a,pp. 248–249.
- ^abcdSmith 1994b.
- ^Foreman 1987,p. 257.
- ^abCopley 1979,pp. 204–205.
- ^abBradley 1999,p. 393.
- ^Hewett, Ivan(15 December 2019)."British Composers Have Started a New Craze for Christmas carols".The Telegraph.Retrieved22 December2022.
- ^Keyte & Parrott 1998,p. 112.
- ^Copley 1979,p. 308.
- ^Copley 1979,p. 141.
- ^Copley 1979,p. 142.
- ^abCopley 1979,p. 145.
- ^abcSmith 1994a,p. 279.
- ^abDowbiggin 1994,p. 25.
- ^abcdeHold 2005,p. 369.
- ^Coghlan 2016,p. 156.
- ^abHold 2005,p. 315.
- ^abSmith 1994a,p. 249.
- ^abCopley 1979,pp. 260–261.
- ^Copley 1979,pp. 146–147.
- ^abMellers 1997,p. 97.
- ^Coghlan 2016,p. 155.
- ^Coghlan, Alexandra (21 December 2020)."Hark! The Secret Messages From the 10 Nation's Favourite Christmas Carols".The Telegraph.Retrieved22 December2022.
- ^"Bethlehem Down".BBC Music Magazine.22 December 2015.Retrieved22 December2022.
- ^Parr, Freya (5 November 2021)."Six of the Best Pieces of Christmas Choral Music".BBC Music Magazine.Retrieved22 December2022.
Works cited
edit- Bradley, Ian(1999).The Penguin Book of Carols.New York:Penguin.ISBN0-14-02-7526-6.
- Coghlan, Alexandra (2016).Carols From King's: The Stories Of Our Favourite Carols From King's College.London:BBC Books.ISBN9781785940941.
- Copley, I. A. (1979).The Music of Peter Warlock: A Critical Survey.London:Dobson Books.ISBN0-234-77249-2.
- Dowbiggin, Arnold (1994)."Peter Warlock Remembered".InCox, David;Bishop, John (eds.).Peter Warlock: a Centenary Celebration.London: Thames Publishing.ISBN0-905210-76-X.
- Foreman, Lewis (1987).From Parry to Britten: British Music in Letter 1900-1945.United States: Amadeus Press.ISBN0-931340-03-9.
- Hold, Trevor(2005) [First published 2002].Parry to Finzi: Twenty English Song-composers.Suffolk:Boydell Press.ISBN1-84383-174-0.
- Keyte, Hugh;Parrott, Andrew,eds. (1998) [First published in 1992].The New Oxford Book of Carols.Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press.ISBN0-19-353322-7.
- Mellers, Wilfred(1997). "Rebel Without Applause". InPaynter, John(ed.).Between Old Worlds and New: Occasional Writings on Music.London: Cygnus Arts.ISBN1-900541-45-9.
- Smith, Barry(1994a).Peter Warlock: the Life of Philip Heseltine.Oxford; New York:Oxford University Press.ISBN0-19-816310-X.
- Smith, Barry (June 1994b). "A Supreme Carollist".Choir & Organ.Vol. 2, no. 3.
External links
edit- First publication of "Bethlehem Down" inThe Daily Telegraph,24 December 1929
- Manuscript for solo arrangement of "Bethlehem Down"Archived20 December 2022 at theWayback Machine
- Bethlehem Down:Scores at theInternational Music Score Library Project