This carol was written in the first half of the 1700s
by the hymn writer Charles Wesley and appeared in his Hymns and Sacred
Poems published in 1739.It
is said the influence for this carol came from him walking to a Christmas
Day service and hearing the church bells of London ringing joyously.Originally it had ten verses and was
given the title and initial line of "Hark! How All the Welkin Rings" and due
to the fact that hymnals did not provide specific music for singers in the 18th
century it was sung to a tune that was also popular as an accompaniment to "Amazing
Grace".Charles Wesley though
it would be given the same tune as his "Christ the Lord is Risen Today",
traditionally sung at Easter but over the years it would undergo several
changes and in 1753 it was rewritten by the minister George Whitefield who
also changed the first two lines.Re-written again Reverend Martin Madan changed the seventh and
eighth lines in 1760 in a further adaptation, and these were followed by yet
further changes in 1782, 1810 and 1861. The music that we now know as the tune for "Hark!
The Herald Angels Sing" was an adaptation by the organist William Hayman
Cummings and presented by him on Christmas Day 1855.He had sung as a chorister when Felix
Mendelssohn had conducted a performance of his Elijah and obviously retaining
and interest in his music he decided to take the second chorus, "Gott ist
Licht" (God is Light), from his 1840 cantata Festgesang (Festival
Song). Festegang was actually
a commemorative piece honouring the invention of the printing press and it's
creator, Johann Gutenberg, and Mendelssohn said himself that the song "could
be used with many choruses" but followed that with "it should never be used
for sacred music".A
suggestion for his reasoning behind this statement is the likeness of it to
Johann Sebastian Bach's "Gavotte" that appeared in his Orchestral Suite
No. 4 and the fact that he could have possibly adapted the piece for
his own use.Remaining a very
popular Christmas carol it was arranged and published by Sir David
Willcocksin his Carols for
Choirs in 1961 and has been the recessional hymn since 1918 for King's
College, Cambridge, in their annual Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols.
Appearing in many films and TV shows it can be heard in It's a Wonderful
Life, A Charlie Brown Christmas, Peace on Earth, The Simpsons, South Park and
Pinky and the Brain, and often sung by popular artists it has been
recorded by Mariah Carey, The Fall, Bradley Joseph and Busted.
Black Dyke Mills Band recordings
Chandos 4541 (CD: A Christmas Fantasy)
Boston Pops recordings
Philips 416 287 - 2 (CD:We Wish You a Merry Christmas)
Conductor - John
Williams
DG 419 414-2 (CD: White Christmas)
Conductor - Arthur
Fiedler
RCA 09026-61685-2 (CD: Pops Christmas Party)
Conductor - Arthur
Fiedler
Sony SK 48232 (CD: Joy to the World)
Conductor - John
Williams
Tanglewood Festival Chorus
Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra recordings
Naxos 8.990005 (CD: Joy to the World)
Conductor - Richard Hayman
Rochester Pops Orchestra
Koch CHD 1531 (CD: Joy to the World - Carols for Orchestra and Chorus)
St Louis Philharmonic Orchestra recordings
Sonari records - 7 55724 00272 3 (CD: Christmas with
the Philharmonic)