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American Christmas Memories | David McCullough and The Tabernacle Choir

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The Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square

The Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square

Күн бұрын

Music is part of our history, it's an expression of who we are and the times we've known. Our highs, our lows, and so much that we love. Take away American music from the American story and you take away a good part of the soul of the story. It's impossible to imagine life in America without it. Without "Shenandoah," or "Amazing Grace," or "Over the Rainbow," or "Oklahoma," or "The Battle Hymn of the Republic," or "America the Beautiful." Or Gershwin, or Copland, or Scott Joplin, or the music of Christmas in America.
I would like to tell you the story of a classic American Christmas carol and song, two of my favorites, they both figured in one of the darkest times ever, during the second World War. Shortly before Christmas 1941, Prime Minister Winston Churchill at considerable personal risk crossed the Atlantic in great secrecy to meet with President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The attack on Pearl Harbor had taken place only weeks before. On Christmas Eve, from a balcony at the White House, the two leaders spoke to a crowd of twenty thousand gathered in the twilight. As reported in the Washington Post, "A crescent moon hung overhead To the southward loomed the Washington Monument as the sun dipped behind the Virginia hills."
President Roosevelt pressed a button to light the Christmas tree, then he spoke to the crowd, and by radio, the world was listening. "Our strongest weapon in this war," he said, "is that conviction of the dignity and brotherhood of man which Christmas day signifies." Churchill began his remarks, "Here [he] was," he said, "far from [his own] country, far from [his] family, yet I cannot truthfully say that I feel far from home. Here in the midst of war, raging, roaring over all the lands and seas, creeping nearer to our hearts and homes, here amid all the tumult, we have tonight the peace of the spirit in each cottage and every generous heart. Here, then, for one night only, should be a brightly lighted island of happiness and peace."
The following morning, Christmas day, the Prime Minister and the President went to church, where with the congregation they joined in singing, "O Little Town of Bethlehem," which Churchill had never heard before.
The words of the hymn, one of the most beloved of Christmas carols, had been written long before by a famous American clergyman, Phillips Brooks, after a visit to the Holy Land. On Christmas Eve in Jerusalem in 1865, Brooks road through the dark by horseback to the place above town where he was told the shepherds had gathered with their flocks. After returning to his church in Philadelphia, in an effort to put down on paper what he had felt that night, Brooks wrote a poem. Then a few days before Christmas, 1868, he asked the organist of the church, Lewis Redner, to put the poem to music, that it might be sung at the Christmas service. Redner tried, but with no success. Christmas Eve he went to bed feeling he had utterly failed. "My brain was all confused," he later said, "but I was roused from sleep late in the night hearing an angel strain. Seizing a piece of music paper I jotted down treble of the tune."
Churchill had spoken in his remarks from the White House balcony of every home as "a brightly lighted island" in the dark. In the first stanza of "O Little Town of Bethlehem" is the line, "Yet in thy dark streets shineth, the everlasting light." I like to think of Churchill and Roosevelt singing that line in particular, at that time. And as would be said of the Prime Minister, he always sang lustily, if not exactly in tune.
By 1942, with the war still raging, more then one million Americans were serving over seas, in sixty-five parts of the world. And it was with those men, and women, and their families in mind, the two talented New Yorkers, lyricist Kim Gannon and composer Walter Kent went to work on a new Christmas song. Walter Kent had already composed "The White Cliffs of Dover" which had become nearly an anthem in Britain. Now they wrote "I'll Be Home for Christmas," which in simplest terms, expressed the longing for home and light in the darkness felt by so many, so very many. "I'll be home for Christmas, there the love light gleams. I'll be home for Christmas, if only in my dreams." When recorded by Bing Crosby in 1943 it became the most popular holiday song of the time, more even then "White Christmas."
History isn't just dry dates and statistics, history is human, history can be a great source of strength and affirmation, an aid to navigation, especially in dark and dangerous times. And the words and music we love, and that have stood the test of time, mean still more when we know their story.
Episode 4187. Aired 13 Dec 2009

Пікірлер: 13
@keithfritz6280
@keithfritz6280 8 жыл бұрын
The art of telling a story is a gift. For some, they are just reading a script, but Mr. McCullough has the voice of a King and only he could relate a story such as this, speaking as an American historian and making you want to watch this over and over. God Bless you Mr. McCullough for coming to Salt Lake City and sharing this wonderful Christmas Story with us. Your genuine desire to remind us all of what our Country went through to save the world was inspired as few others are.
@baberRuth
@baberRuth 2 жыл бұрын
6yrs late, but, Keith, so eloquently stated. Bravo
@arthardewri9702
@arthardewri9702 Жыл бұрын
Merry Christmas 🎄 every Americans around the world 🌍.
@rr7firefly
@rr7firefly 7 жыл бұрын
At 6:25 in this video my ears perked up, and by 7:43 there were tears in my eyes. Seeing all those black and white photos of World War II servicemen and their families and hearing that classic song (I'll be Home...) I wish we still had a reverent respect for the meaning of Christmas instead of the ironic and often silly sentiments that makes us all so weary during the holidays. Christmas belongs to everyone, Christian and non-Christian, for it is the spirit of sharing loving kindness and advancing peace among all people, among all nations.
@phyllisbentley2564
@phyllisbentley2564 7 жыл бұрын
Well Said ! ! ! And never more truly stated.
@tbthomas5117
@tbthomas5117 7 жыл бұрын
When I was growing up, we had a saying: "Never trust anyone over 30..." Thankfully, even earlier, my father had introduced me to the MTC, the "Battle Hymn of the Republic" in particular, as well as the music of people like Glenn Gould, Rogers & Hammerstein, Carmen Dragon, and Leonard Bernstein. Over time (well into my 30's) I found I had set aside the glib slogans of adolescence, and acquired a curiosity about the past -- of my family, our music, our country, and eventually, our civilization. In retrospect, I'm convinced that being born on the cusp of the birth of the modern world, has been one of my biggest advantages living in that world. Now, as my generation gives way to our successors, I worry that many of them may not share the curiosity which compelled me to try and understand the hardship and sacrifice of my predecessors, and which allowed us all to arrive where we are today -- a golden age of peace and prosperity unprecedented in human history. Thanks to the Internet, and miracles such as KZbin, we all have the means to know our world, and its history in vivid detail. We ignore it at great peril.
@Nyck461
@Nyck461 9 жыл бұрын
Today, a Sunday night, listening this amazing history with the choir in the background is a major preparation for one more new week of work and many other blessings from God. This history and the music touched my heart and make realize that God is real and an amazing God. Many of us celebrate Christmas as a day only to exchange gifts forgetting the real meaning of the Christmas. This song really touched my heart ad tomorrow , Monday I will still enjoying the beauty of this music.
@rr7firefly
@rr7firefly 7 жыл бұрын
I'm glad there are other people who can still feel something, as you do. Thank you for your comment. Our world today has lost much of the innocence that most of us knew as children and certainly our parents even more so. This music reassures me that all is not lost, that there are still good people who believe in something meaningful.
@phyllisbentley2564
@phyllisbentley2564 7 жыл бұрын
Thank You All for yet Another Excellent, Inspiring history lesson that will go out to as many people as I can reach starting a few weeks before this next Thanksgiving. God Bless the MTC.
@Magazinelady
@Magazinelady 10 ай бұрын
O Little Town of Bethlehem is the perfect song for today's dark days. This made me really listen to the carol. Nice presentation and beautiful singing. Rest in peace, David!
@zevnikov
@zevnikov 7 жыл бұрын
Amazing historical and musical journey into soul and heart of classy american culture, poetry, music and attitude towards life itself. Bravo USA! I love you. And hats off! I hope our American Night will be as successful as your amazing performance back then!
@susanmarty26
@susanmarty26 10 жыл бұрын
Beautifully done..the story and the music was so touching and lovely. Thank you!
@edwardswilliamsj
@edwardswilliamsj 10 жыл бұрын
Mas bonito si estuviera doblada al español :-)
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