Welcome to the Midday Holiday Special.
We have created a dynamic playlist of music, poetry and stories of the season.
Selections on this playlist include:
1. MUSIC: I Saw Three Ships Come Sailing In. A carol arranged by Robert Shaw and Alice Parker. From a 2010 CD recording by the Baltimore Choral Arts Society, "Christmas at America’s First Cathedral," with Tom Hall conducting.
2. POEM: Ring Out Wild Bells, by Alfred, Lord Tennyson. Read by former Midday producer Cianna Greaves.
3. MUSIC: A Clean Heart. A motet for a cappella chorus by James Lee, III. A faculty member at Morgan State University whose music is performed all over the world. This is a setting of a text from the Psalms, Create in Me a Clean Heart from "Christmas at America’s First Cathedral."
4. MUSIC: Ogo ni fun Oluwa, by the great African American composer Rosephanye Powell, sung by the Baltimore Choral Arts Society. This is an African Praise Song from the Yoruba tribe in Nigeria. The title means "Rejoice! Glory be unto the Lord." (from "Christmas at America’s First Cathedral.")
5. READING: "Aunt Lola," written and read by Baltimore writer Rafael Alvarez.
6. MUSIC: Ring the Bells, by Rosephanye Powell, commissioned by Tom Hall when he was the Music Director of the Baltimore Choral Arts Society. (from "Christmas at America’s First Cathedral.")
7. MUSIC: Have You Seen the Baby Jesus? by Rosephanye Powell, with soprano Janice Chandler Eteme. (from "Christmas at America’s First Cathedral."
8: READING: A Chinese proverb, read by former WYPR Digital producer, Jamyla Krempel.
9. MUSIC: Precious Gifts. Music by Dave Brubeck; text by his wife Iola. Most people know Brubek as one of the most iconic pianists in the history of jazz, but he was also a frequent composer of choral music, in collaboration with his wife. This song is one of their beautiful, a cappella gems, in its world premiere recording, featuring the Baltimore Choral Arts Society.
10. POEM: The Journey of the Magi, by T. S. Eliot. Read by Tom Hall. The poet was born in St. Louis in 1888 but moved to Britain as a young man and eventually became an English citizen.
11. POEM: "Twas the Night Before Christmas," by Clement Moore; a classic reading by Louis Armstrong.