Bethlehem Down | |
---|---|
Key | D minor |
Period | Early 20th century |
Genre | Christmas carol |
Form | SATB choir |
Occasion | The Daily Telegraph Christmas carol competition |
Text | Bruce Blunt |
Melody | Peter Warlock |
Composed | 1927 |
Published | 24 December 1927 in The Daily Telegraph |
Publisher | The Daily Telegraph (1927), Winthrop Rogers (1928) |
"Bethlehem Down" is a Christmas carol for SATB choir composed in 1927 by British composer Peter Warlock (1894–1930)—the pseudonym of Philip Arnold Heseltine.[a] It is set to a poem written by journalist and poet Bruce Blunt (1899–1957). Warlock and Blunt wrote the carol to finance an "immortal carouse" (a heavy bout of drinking) over Christmas in 1927. The pair submitted the carol to The Daily Telegraph's annual Christmas carol contest and won. It is characterised by modal harmony with chromatic inflections. The musicologist Barry Smith described "Bethlehem Down" as the finest of all of Warlock's choral music.
In 1930, Warlock composed an arrangement of "Bethlehem Down" for solo voice and keyboard accompaniment. It was the last piece of music that Warlock wrote, less than three weeks before he died. The solo arrangement uses the soprano line from the SATB version as its melody. It features more complex harmony than the choral arrangement, highlighting the text in a more sombre manner.
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