MzTeachuh is a resource blog providing educational links for professional development, timely articles for special needs, ed tech and STEM, as well as interesting and amusing posts in the Fine Arts and the Humanities.
Thursday, December 4, 2014
A Charlie Brown Christmas: the Music
This
is such a timeless story for kids and adults. The choice of music by
the creators of 'A Charlie Brown Christmas' captures the precious
elements of melancholy, winter beauty and childhood insight involved
with Christmas. I appreciate that Schulz chose to include the Gospel of
Luke in the midst of burgeoning secularism. Happy to hear it year after
year. Vince Guaraldi's original compositions capture the joy of
childhood with such poignancy. My students always express delight when I
play this album the weeks before the winter break--even the big, tough
highschoolers.
Being an incurable teacher, here is background for the traditional carols. Just for fun.
Good ole Charlie Brown chooses a scrawny little tree--he always did have a big, empathetic heart.
This
is a traditional, German song which means O Christmas Tree. The custom
of Christmas trees started in Germany, and became popular in Great
Britain and the US when Queen Victoria and Prince Albert married.
Albert, being German, brought the tree custom with him.
'Hark!
the Herald Angels Sing' is another English song written by Charles
Wesley and perked up by George Whitefield in 1739, which was during the
time of the Great Awakening in the US.
A Charlie Brown Christmas - Hark! The Herald Angels Sing
Schroeder,
Charlie Brown's friend, loves to play Beethoven, but is badgered by
Lucy, who has a crush on him, to play 'Jingle Bells.' The irony is that
Beethoven composed 'Fur Elise' for a girl that didn't return the
attention, but in this story Schroeder does not return Lucy's attention.
And that 'Jingle Bells' was written in 1857 for the holiday of
Thanksgiving by an American.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.