A Christmas Australis with Real Music with the Australian Brandenburg Orchestra and Choir, by Andrew Miller
Noël! Noël!
City Recital Hall, Angel Place, Sydney: 14 December 2011
plays in Wollongong on 17 December, Cremorne 18 December, Newtown 19 December
broadcast on ABC classic FM on 21 December, 8 pm
Henry John Gauntlett - Once, in royal David’s city
Giovanni Gabrieli - Jubilate Deo
Giovanni Pierluigi da Palestrina - Assumpta est Maria in caelum
Maurizio Cazzati - Passacaglia and Ciaccona
Anonymous - Falalán, Villancico catalan, and Bastião
Tomaso Albinoni - Adagio from concerto in D minor for oboe, opus 9 no. 2
Antonio Vivaldi - Trio sonata in D minor, opus 1 no. 12 “La Follia”, RV 63
Traditional arr. Tristan Coelho - O come, O come, Emmanuel and the Coventry Carol
Morten Lauridsen - “La Rose Complète” and “Dirait-on” (arr. Coelho) from Les Chansons des Roses
Katherine K. Davis arr. Tristan Coelho - The Little Drummer Boy
Felix Gruber - Stille Nacht
Anon. arr. David Wilcocks - O come all ye faithful
Australian Brandenburg Orchestra
Australian Brandenburg Choir
Paul Dyer - artistic director, conductor, harpsichord, chorusmaster
Christina Leonard - saxophone
Having grown up in the northern hemisphere, the winter Christmas is ingrained in me, but the event is fundamentally connected to mid-winter. The pagan winter solstice festival with its strong connection to nature, namely the Sun, a celebration of the days starting to lengthen and a new year beginning, is tied to Christmas as the scriptural imagery is compatible with the older ritual’s. Zeus, Dionysus, Apollo, and Mithras are all also alleged to have been born on the (northern) winter solstice and St. Chrysostom said in the 4th Century of the timing of the Nativity ‘while the heathen were busied with their profane rites the Christians might perform their holy ones without disturbance’ but also thought it a suitable birthday for the ‘Sun of Righteousness.’[1] In that sense it naturally and intuitively doesn't feel like the right festival for the southern hemisphere's summer solstice. So unique traditions evolve here and the more appealing ones are strongly connected to nature — spending all your time outside enjoying the long daylight while it lasts, roses blooming, surfing, eating seafood, fresh fruit, especially cherries, etc. —, but still are colored by the northern traditions. With his Australian Brandenburg Orchestra, Sydney's main squeeze for Baroque music and period instrument lovers, Paul Dyer provides the best music for this austral summer solstice Christmas, music which makes natural and festive sense. It is very serious, 'scholarly' music, but with the artistic spirit of the Baroque steeping it, it has a bright festive sunny quality too, especially in the style of their playing. Dyer has assembled a varied program of traditional carols played very thoughtfully, Spanish popular music from the 16th Century, late Baroque instrumental music and early Baroque motets and more recently composed pieces. Somehow Dyer's enthusiasm, sense of occasion and serious-festive-art approach to music allows all this to hang together comfortably.

