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Fraser Bailey
Fraser Bailey
3 years ago

Thank you Douglas, for this and so many other great pieces this year, not to mention your appearances with Bret Weinstein, Michael Malice and others. Nobody understands and describes the ongoing collapse of the western mind in quite the way that you do.

There are some great tips here, and I’m delighted to know that you like Messiaen, whose Quartet For The End Of Time (I think that’s the correct title) is one of my favourite pieces of music – a masterpiece of anticipation and release not unlike Wayne Rooney’s free kick goal against Norwich City earlier this season.

The piece that I play endlessly at this time of year, always in the background when hosting, is Mozart’s Grand Partita, KVK 361. It is not a Christmas piece, but it always feels very Christmassy to me and everyone else.

Nun Yerbizness
Nun Yerbizness
3 years ago
Reply to  Fraser Bailey

Love thy neighbor.

Wear a mask.

Merry Christmas.

Paul Davies
Paul Davies
3 years ago

Thankyou Douglas. You have once again given support to my belief that you are one of the commentators I most admire in this day and age. If you like choir and organ you should try David Briggs, Stephen Layton and the Trinity College Choir Mass for Notre Dame. Totally ethereal.

Peter Shaw
Peter Shaw
3 years ago

I fear that once Churches are allowed to re -open, the fall in numbers attending Church will be huge. Some people will forever feel frightened of being in close company with relative strangers. The lockdown will have blessed them with life-long OCD or other anxiety disorder. But another portion will have received a message form the Church itself, that physical attendance is not that important. For example in the Catholic Church attendance at Sunday Mass and on Holy Days of Obligation is compulsory. For the last 9 months however Catholics have been told it isn’t. They have been invited to be spectators at a TV event. A message has been sent about how the Church itself regards the Mass. They should not be surprised if they never see attendance very much reduced.

John Wilkes
John Wilkes
3 years ago

In the true spirit of Christmas, thanks to Douglas Murray for his fine piece. It will probably never happen again, such are his views, but I offer it gladly today.

Wulvis Perveravsson
Wulvis Perveravsson
3 years ago

The Coventry Carol had me in tears. So beautiful. There is something about medieval music that always gets me! As for Messiaen, I’m afraid I don’t share your love for his organ works. Give me some Buxtehude any day of the week; BuxWV218 ‘Te Deum Laudamus’ is particularly haunting, joyful, and epic all at the same time.

Fraser Bailey
Fraser Bailey
3 years ago

Apropos of Buxtehude, back in the late 1980s somebody (I think it was The independent when it was still a credible organ (excuse the pun)) ran a competition in which entrants wrote a short biography of a famous person, deliberately downplaying their achievements or damning them with faint praise. Somebody sent in a great entry for Bach, the killer line in which was ‘His technique as an organist was said to rival that of Buxtehude’.

Wulvis Perveravsson
Wulvis Perveravsson
3 years ago
Reply to  Fraser Bailey

Haha. Well, without him we wouldn’t have had Bach, so I think he must be celebrated for his teaching as well as his own work!

Mark Gourley
Mark Gourley
3 years ago

I’m a little bored with carols by now, but God bless you, Douglas, for leading me to the splendid Messaien recording.

Michelle Johnston
Michelle Johnston
3 years ago

Wonderful piece as a chorister who has sung many of these pieces to have them placed before me whilst away is much appreciated.

Ian Perkins
Ian Perkins
3 years ago

This piece may not be in the same category musically as some of those mentioned here, but it nonetheless moved me and others I told of it: The London African Gospel Choir singing Claudius Afolabi Siffre’s “Something inside so strong” for Julian Assange in front of Belmarsh prison last night, Christmas Eve. On Youtube.

vladmoss
vladmoss
3 years ago

Dear Mr. Murray, I am in the middle of reading your wonderful book, “The Madness of Crowds”. I would dearly love to get in touch with you by e-mail. Please contact me.

Judy Englander
Judy Englander
3 years ago
Reply to  vladmoss

Try contacting him via his publisher.

Ian Perkins
Ian Perkins
3 years ago
Reply to  vladmoss

He has a website, douglasmurray dot net, with a page labelled ‘Contact’ via which you can apparently do just that.

vladmoss
vladmoss
3 years ago
Reply to  Ian Perkins

Thanks, Mr. Perkins. I’ve just written to him there.

Ian Perkins
Ian Perkins
3 years ago

This

andy young
andy young
3 years ago

I. f*****g. HATE. Darke’s twee, syrupy perversion of In The Bleak Midwinter. Completely destroys the meaning, the feeling the words generate. It’s Holst every time, by a country mile.
The rest I wouldn’t quarrel with, though I’ve heard pieces of Messiaen I prefer; this seems to descend into muddle too often to my ear (which will be different to others of course). He does convey the majesty & mystery of religious experience in an unparalleled way, only equalled by the great masters such as Bach.

David Bennett
David Bennett
3 years ago

Ambience!

anneclarke255
anneclarke255
3 years ago

This is such a lovely piece, Douglas. Thank you so much.

James Wilson
James Wilson
3 years ago

Although not generally a churchgoer myself, I lament very greatly the savage attitude of the current political, scientific and (let us be clear) health authorities, under the dubious excuse of a not especially deadly respiratory virus, towards the rights of churches and churchgoers to choose to continue to practice their faith in whatever manner they see fit, exercising their own judgment as to whether they wish to take the alleged risk of “disablement or death by covid.”

The simple question constantly evaded and ignored by all the authorities, both scientific/health and government, is as we by clear official admission have an epidemic that only has serious consequences on a very small minority of anyone but older or already seriously debilitated people, why are we not simply taking measures to protect the old and vulnerable, and letting everybody else get on with their life as normal?

This simple question needs to be asked over and over until the faces of those in authority turn red with shame and embarrassment, as I am 100% certain after studying all the evidence for 9 months or more now, that those authorities have absolutely no satisfactory answers to this question.

My own personal guess at to the real reasons this is being done are firstly, because those in and around government are likely to get very rich thereby due to their official or unofficial links with the vaccine and other healthcare providers; and secondly, governments are happy all round the world to use this allegedly unusually deadly pandemic as an excuse to exercise far more control over their populations, especially in regard of trying to shut down the (prior to lockdown) ever increasing protests against social and economic inequality, as the gap between rich and poor has got to such epic proportions, and shows every sign of getting worse, such that even in advanced Western nations like Britain, the children of even middle class professionals have difficulty getting on the housing ladder, and finding well paid jobs and opportunities, such that they can live a “normal” independent life.

alexfrostisawanker
alexfrostisawanker
3 years ago

Yes, I always preferred the Darke version to Holst’s although I like both.

Recently I have been listening to Polish carols, kolędy, as there is a staggering number and some of them are exquisite such as Lulajże Jezuniu. They should be much better known in Western Europe and elsewhere.

Mike Todd
Mike Todd
3 years ago

yeah nice one