From American Magazine-
The hills around Salzburg are alive, we hear, “alive with the sound
of music.” Young and old, the people sing and hum and strum. The water
in the brooks laughs as it trips and falls downstream. Church chimes
sigh with the breeze.
This music, we also hear, has been sung for
1,000 years. Maybe. But one song—probably the most famous—is celebrating
only 200 years. On Christmas Eve 1818, in the church of St. Nicholas in
Oberndorf near Salzburg, “Stille Nacht” (“Silent Night”) was sung for
the first time.
The words to “Silent Night” were the work of the Rev. Joseph Mohr, a
young priest in Oberndorf. He wrote them in 1816 as a reflection on
peace after a summer of violence in Salzburg. On Christmas Eve two years
later, he asked his friend Franz Xaver Gruber, a schoolteacher in the
neighboring town of Arnsdorf and also the organist in Oberndorf, to set
his words to music. Gruber did so, and together that evening at
Christmas Eve Mass, the two performed “Silent Night” for the gathered
faithful, Mohr singing and Gruber playing the guitar, since the church
organ was not working. “Silent Night” was an immediate sensation.
More here-
https://www.americamagazine.org/arts-culture/2018/12/06/silent-night-turns-200-year-it-greatest-christmas-song-ever?fbclid=IwAR30LXTIwwuXg0YXWm1P2v4yJovxgLtLENwDClFufICoLCd_uWLm4pBy-EA
Opinion – 23 November 2024
13 hours ago
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