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While Shepards Watch Their Flocks by Night

ARRANGED FOR SSAATTBB CHOIR AND CHAMBER ORCHESTRA 

Instrumentation

Instrumentation

Flute

Alto Flute

Oboe

English Horn

Clarinet in Bb

Bassoon

2 Horns in F

Timpani

Percussion

Suspended Cymbal, Glockenspiel

Celesta

Harp

SSAATTBB Choir

Violin I & II

Viola 

Cello 

Contrabass

Program Notes

Program Notes

“While Shepherds Watched Their Flocks by Night” is one of the most well-known Christmas carols in the English language. Originally titled “Song of the Angels”, it recounts the familiar passage from the Gospel of Luke, describing how an angel of the Lord visited lowly shepherds to announce the birth of Christ. Unlike many traditional Christmas carols whose authors are unknown, this carol was almost certainly written by Nahum Tate (1652-1715), who became Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom in 1692; it was published in Tate and Nicholas Brady’s 1700 supplement to their New Version of the Psalms of David in 1696.

Interestingly, “While Shepherds Watched Their Flocks by Night” was the only Christmas hymn authorized to be sung by the Anglican Church; before 1700 only the Psalms of David were permitted. As a result, this beloved text is one of the first “official” Christmas carols in English literature and is the only one of the sixteen works in the 1700 supplement still sung today.

Over the years, the carol has been sung to a variety of tunes. For this arrangement by Douglas Mears, scored for SSAATTBB choir and chamber orchestra, a new tune has been chosen. It is a traditional English folk melody titled “Van Diemen’s Land.” Widely published during the nineteenth century in broadsides (single sheets of inexpensive paper printed only on one side), this folk song was collected from traditional singers in England during the twentieth century. Vaughan Williams, who sought to organically weave elements of his native British music into his compositions, included “Van Diemen’s Land” in Six Studies in English Folk Song. His aim in setting these songs, as he explained it, was for them to be “treated with love.”

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