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Old & New Cornish Christmas Carols 

Cornish Carols - A Tradition For The World

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These digital Christmas cards are based on a series of  engravings and old and new Carols. 

As part of the World Heritage Site Cultural Programme a competition was held to promote Cornish Carol singing and to find some new ones. I am grateful to the organisers "From Carn to Coast" for providing me with a CD of the winning carol plus two others for inclusion on the site. 

I have illustrated the site with 19th century black and white prints by a number of artists, and have used the  Microsoft Photopaint programme to digitally enhance them adding colour and carol singers. I hope you enjoy the result. An explanation on how these engravings were created is given in the article by A Eva a.r.c.a. which was published in Old Cornwall volume three. The picture above is of Market Jew Street, Penzance and was drawn by Thomas Allom a watercolourist and illustrator, an architect and topographical draughtsman. He practiced as an architect mainly in London, notably on the Kensington Park Estate in the 1850s and was a founder member of the Royal Institute of British Architects. Allom was most prolific and successful as a topographical artist during the 1830s and 1840s. This and other of his prints were engraved on steel and produced as black and white illustrations  in "Cornwall Illustrated" which was published in 1831 by Fisher, Son & Co of London.

A second article published by John Penwith gives a background to the carols. J Penwith was the pen-name of J H Martin, b1914, d1998. He wrote for "The Cornishman" and other papers before leaving Trezelah, Gulval, in 1952. He ended up in Stevenage, Herts, where he co-founded and edited the magazine "Ships Monthly". He is buried, with his American wife (Ruth), in Ludgvan. John was a Bard of the Cornish Gorseth "Man of the Moors". *Note

Thankfully the demise of the Cornish carol did not come about and there are still groups going out into the streets of Cornwall and indeed Cornish communities around the world, to sing them at Christmastime. The aim of this site is to make more people aware of the tradition of singing carols to tunes written by local people. Over the next twelve months it is planned to add to the site recordings of local groups singing their particular favourite carol and if you can help in this quest then please contact our Folk Song and Music Recorder Merv Davey: 

COME AND SING

Federation sponsor's a Carol category at the Cornish Music Festival

With the publication of its second book of Old Cornish carols the Federation hopes to help stimulate the singing of them by sponsoring a new category, (D7 Choirs (any size) Cornish Carols), at the 2012 Cornwall Music Festival to be held in Truro in March 2012. If you and a group of friends would like to take part then Click here for an entry form and more information.  

   

You could help promote this project by sending either an individual card or all of them by clicking on a title below then when the page you choose opens cut and paste its URL onto an e-mail with your message.

George Pritchard [Old Cornwall Web Master]

Panoramas and Prints by Charles A. Eva a.r.c.a.

Leaves From A Cornish  Notebook. By John Penwith.

The Digital Carol Cards

1. St Agnes / Mithian "Star of Bethlehem" 
2. St Erth "When Righteous Joseph Wedded Was"
3. Padstow "Hark the Herald Angels Sing".
4. Penryn / Mabe "Sound sound your instruments of joy."
5. St Levan "The Boars Head Carol."
6. St Ives Cully's "Hellesveor." plus "The Carol Choir." Poem by John Barber read by Rennee Nash
7. St Just in Penwith "The seven Joys of Mary."
8. Truro "A Virgin Most Pure."
9. The Copper Triangle South Australia  
10.Cadgwith The Holly and the Ivy
11. Troon, "Sapphire Throne
12. Illogan "Lo he comes an infant stranger
13. South Africa "Hark what music fills creation" and "Star of Jacob"
14. Camborne "Hark, the glad sound! the Saviour comes,"
15. St Day Sen Day Carol
16. Lostwithiel The Star of Jacob & The Cherry Tree Carol
17. Redruth The Redruth Wassail & Hark, what music fills creation
18. Stratton / Bude & District  'Flaming Seraphs'
19 . Mousehole "Softly the night is sleeping"
20. Michigan Angelic Hosts by Merritt
21. Penzance "Star of Bethlehem" 
22. Newlyn The Dilly Carol
23. Boscastle
"The Boscastle Carol"
24. Lands End, First & Last Inn Hark the Glad Sound
25. East & West Looe Try Gorbel / Three Ships, Arr. M. Davey and J Mills, Cornish Words J. Mills
26. Helston  " O Well! O Well! The First Nowell"
27. Launceston "Lo! the Eastern Sages rise"
28. Grass Valley USA "The Prince of Life"
29 New Year Card  
 

cut & paste any of the above titles on an e-mail to send the card with your message. 

* Note: Information supplied by his son Mr. David K Martin of Ashford in Kent.

 

  The Carol Singers; One & All Magazine (December 1868)

1. 

Now dawns the morn of Christmas,

And ere the laggard sun

Has time to show his crimson face,

The snowfall has begun;

The feathery flakes decend;

And on the lawn, the field, the road,

In one white carpet blend.

 

2. 

Come, draw the curtains tighter,

And make a merry blaze;

Light up the warm and cosy room,

And then what fun well raise!

Well sing some pretty carols

In honour of the day;

And then a pleasant simple game  

The boys and girls will play.

 

3. 

Hark! Stay those noisy gambols-

I hear a pleasant strain

Of childrens music at the door-

Hark! There it is again!

They are the carol singers,

Who’ll sing at out desire;

And there we’ll have them in a while,

To warm them at the fire

 

4. 

The snowfall now is over,

The sky begins to show,

So now I think we’d better let

Our little travelers go,

With just one other carol

In honour of this day,

Whereon the Saviour came from heaven

To take man’s doom away. 

 

 

Nadelik lowen ha blydhen nowyth da.

Have a happy Christmas and a peaceful New Year

Thanks to Hymns and Carols for making the midis scores available to use. 

RealPlayer

Download it free here

 

 

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