Tune Tuesday

Today, I want to recognize the birthday of a man who is synonymous with holiday music and my childhood.  He stood on the podium and conducted many of the holiday songs that played on the radio and over the mall PA systems every year. 

Today would be the 130th birthday of Arthur Fiedler, the man who made the Boston Pops Orchestra known throughout the country.  He took the helm of the BPO in 1930 (He was the 19th conductor) and held that position for 50 years.

Arthur Fiedler

Believe it or not, under the direction of Fiedler, they say the Boston Pops Orchestra recorded more than any other orchestra in the world!  They recorded most of their material for RCA Victor and had sales of over $50 million!

The first recording was done in Boston Symphony Hall in 1935.  Recordings included the first complete recording of Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue, the music of Leroy Anderson, Tchaikovsky, Beethoven, Bach, and even the Beatles!

Fiedler and the Pops recorded three Christmas albums.  Today, you can probably find all three in one CD collection.  As I said earlier, many of those songs are familiar to people just because they played in stores during the holidays.  The ones that stick out to me are:

Santa Claus is Coming to Town

Rudolph, The Red Nosed Reindeer

…and Sleigh Ride

Those are just three songs that are instantly recognizable as Fiedler and the Pops for me.  Sleigh Ride was a piece composed by Leroy Anderson.  It is another Anderson piece I want to spotlight today.

As a senior in high school, I had the opportunity to play A Christmas Festival by Leroy Anderson.  The version we played was arranged for band instead of orchestra.  It was a thrill for me, as I had loved the song long before we played it.

We had one of the Boston Pops Christmas albums and I would listen to it with headphones on.  (Now, I will embarrass myself) I used to “conduct” A Christmas Festival with a stick in my room.  That piece really stuck out to me.

I found out that in 1950 Arthur Fiedler asked Leroy Anderson to write a special concert piece for a Christmas recording he and the Pops were doing. Anderson chose eight popular Christmas Carols and Jingle Bells and created an amazing Christmas overture.

See if you can name them all…

Happy birthday, Arthur Fiedler!!

Christmas Memory – The High School Holiday Band Concert

If my memory serves me correct, our high school band played three concerts. The first was the Fall concert, usually in early November, which featured both Concert Band and Marching Band songs. The Spring Concert happened in mid-May, and usually featured some of the more “fun” songs. In between those, we had a holiday concert in December.

This concert featured both the Concert Band and the various choir groups. The band almost always opened the concert and would play every 5th or 6th song. I think the band may have played a total of 4 or 5 songs during the entire concert. My grandparents, who were at every band concert, disliked the Christmas concert. They didn’t like having to wait so long to hear the band play.

It wasn’t easy for us band kids to sit on the stage throughout the entire concert either. I want to say that the area of the stage that the band was on was darkened while the choirs sang. It didn’t stop some of the goofing off in the brass and percussion sections. I can recall the drummers dropping things more than one time while the choirs were singing. They would get the “evil eye” from our band director which basically said, “Cut it out!”

The concert always ended with Handel’s Hallelujah Chorus from Messiah. Our choir director would invite any alumni up to the stage to join in and sing. It was a perfect way to end the concert. The stage was already packed with the band and all the choir people, but we always made room for the various alumni singers.

The holiday concert my senior year was pretty special for me. I can’t recall if it was the entire trumpet section, but we all got to go up on the roof of the auditorium a half hour before the concert and play Christmas carols. They were arranged in 4 part harmony and it sounded so cool. I was lucky enough to direct the players. I can only imagine how cool it must have been for folks walking into the concert and hearing us from the roof.

As a kid, I stumbled on a Boston Pops Christmas album. It had many of the songs that would play over the PA system as you walked through K-Mart or Hudson’s during the holiday season. The first song on the album was an almost 9 minute medley of Christmas songs by Leroy Anderson called A Christmas Festival.

The song remains one of my favorites to this day. I used to grab a stick and crank this up in my headphones and “conduct” the orchestra in my room. For the holiday concert my senior year, we actually got to play it, which made it even cooler for me. I was so familiar with it already, but playing it was challenging. It was a tough piece. There were plenty of time signature changes and key changes, and some high notes. We also played the “band” version of it, which was a little different from the “orchestra” version. It was such a neat piece to play. One of the things I did after the concert was grab a copy of the conductor’s score so I could watch it as I listened to the record from home.

Give it a listen:

After we graduated, there were a few times that some of the alumni band got together to play Christmas carols in the lobby prior to the school’s holiday concert. I miss those days and miss playing my horn.