Christmas Invitation, A

A Christmas triptych for mixed chorus and orchestra to texts by Malcolm Guite.

Duration: 16'
Difficulty: 3/5 (Difficulty Rating Overview)

  • Fezziwig's Ball (4:45)

  • Look! Look! O man, look at the world you make! (6:15)

  • Christmas is the Lord's own day, Rejoice! (5:00)

 
  • VOICES

    Mixed Chorus (divisi, with solos)

    ORCHESTRA

    Piccolo

    2 Flutes

    2 Oboes

    Cor Anglais

    2 Clarinets

    Bass Clarinet

    2 Bassoons

    Contrabassoon

    4 French Horns

    3 Trumpets

    2 Tenor Trombones

    Bass Trombone

    Tuba

    Timpani

    Percussion (2 players)

    Glockenspiel

    Chimes (Tubular Bells)

    Gran Cassa

    Piatti

    Suspended Cymbals (Small, Medium & Large)

    Tambourine

    Tam Tam

    Harp

    Celesta

    Strings

    Note: Piccolo, Cor Anglais, Bass Clarinet, Contrabassoon, Horns III-IV and Trumpet 3 are optional parts.

  • A Christmas Invitation is a three-movement work for mixed chorus, soloists and orchestra. I have chosen Dickens’ A Christmas Carol as inspiration, although the texts are original poems by Cambridge poet Malcolm Guite. The setting is not intended as a literal tableaux. Rather, because of the metaphoric value of the story’s spirits, Christmas Past, Present, and Future, I hope a variety of responses from convivial joy to thoughtful reflection will be invoked.

    The first movement (Fezziwig’s Ball) revels in the nostalgia and merriment of our Victorian Christmas traditions, with music full of rhythm and vitality. As this movement closes, both text and music cast a shadow of loneliness over this beautiful scene, leading into a sober second movement (Look! Look! O man, look at the world you make) which reflects on Dickens’ surprising revelation of Ignorance and Want under the robe of the spirit of Christmas Present. The third movement (Christmas is the Lord’s own day, Rejoice!) proclaims hope for the future in the sort of redemption that was offered to Ebenezer Scrooge, while at the same time acknowledging that there are significant choices still before us. I hope this new holiday composition will be memorable and enjoyable for all!

    ––J.A.C. Redford, from the program notes to the world premiere, December 2015

  • A Christmas Invitation

    Malcolm Guite (1957- )

    I - Fezziwig's Ball

    “Trim the lamps,” says Fezziwig,

    “Tonight it's Christmas Eve!”

    And every lad is clearing space

    And rolling up his sleeve,

    And now we’ll have the shutters up,

    And clear the desks aside

    And make the warehouse snug and bright

    To dance at Christmastide

    Here's porter for the fiddler,

    And brandy for the guests,

    And sweets and cakes and comfits

    In richly laden chests.

    And children rush around the feast

    And gaze with shining eyes

    On roast meat and cold meat

    And minced meat and pies

    The holly berries glisten,

    The ivy holds the light,

    A blaze leaps up the chimney

    To warm the winter’s night

    Here's music for the couples

    And dancing to the tune

    As we all weave around and back

    Beneath a Christmas moon

    And here the young and hearty

    Cut capers at the ball

    With their old host and hostess

    As nimble as them all

    But silent in the corner

    Invisible to all,

    An old man and a spirit

    Who cannot join the ball.

    His long life on the outside

    Is looking in at last

    And longing for the chance he missed

    In every Christmas past.

    The power to make men happy

    Had once been in his hands

    If he could just release it now

    That he might make amends!

    And will he bloom or wither,

    That long-excluded shade,

    Who leaves a ghostly Christmas Past

    And hears the music fade?

    II - Look! Look! O man, look at the world you make!

    We close the shutters up to make our feast

    To share our plenty only with our own

    But who is this? A stranger, not a guest,

    Who calls us now to take the shutters down?

    Look! Look! O man, look at the world you make!

    These are your children, Ignorance and Want!

    Look at the ones who suffer for your sake;

    Pinched in their poverty, withered and gaunt,

    Sewing the clothes and shoes you throw away,

    Assembling every shiny new device.

    You wrap the goods they make for Christmas Day,

    Your children get the gifts –these pay the price.

    But you can change, for change is in the air,

    Want is a child who might yet find relief.

    Loosen your love, release your heart and share,

    O dare to be a patron, not a thief!

    Let all your love for family and friends

    Be widened by His Love, and make amends.

    Rise from your table, throw the window wide

    Take down the shutters and unbar the door

    Welcome the stranger, call him to your side,

    That he might teach you what this feast is for!

    III - Christmas is the Lord’s own day, Rejoice!

    Christmas is the Lord’s own day, Rejoice!

    Rise and recover while you have the choice!

    This is the day to loosen and release

    The day to hear again His living voice.

    “On Christmas day I come to be with you,

    Today I take your nature for my own,

    Today I offer you a heart of flesh,

    Or will you choose again a heart of stone?

    This Christmas choose between true life and death,

    This Christmas choose between the good and ill,

    This day I breathe in you my living breath,

    This day you may do any good you will!

    Oh come with me and I will come with you

    And show you how to love my world with me

    To bring your best to Ignorance and Want,

    To be and bear the gift that makes them free.”

    Christmas is the Lord’s own day, Rejoice!

    Rise and recover, you still have the choice!

    This is the day to loosen and release

    The day to hear again His living voice.

    Copyright ©2015 by Malcolm Guite.

    All rights reserved. Used by permission.

  • A Christmas Invitation was composed for Richard Nance and the Choirs and Orchestra of Pacific Lutheran University. It was premiered in 2015 on 2 December at Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall in Portland, OR, 5-6 & 11-12 December at Lagerquist Concert Hall on the campus of Pacific Lutheran University and 7 December at Benaroya Hall in Seattle, WA by the Choirs and Orchestra of Pacific Lutheran University with Richard Nance conducting. The performances were recorded for broadcast and the program was aired on PBS stations in Washington and Oregon during the Christmas season in 2015. In December 2016, the concert was aired over 200 times on PBS stations across the United States.

Purchase A Christmas Invitation

Choral Scores:

Order one score per singer plus one each for the conductor and the rehearsal pianist. Scores are delivered as PDF files. Purchase of choral scores includes permission to make the number of copies ordered.

Instrumental Scores:

Scores and parts are delivered as PDF files. A set of parts includes permission to make the requisite copies for the ensemble.

Pricing:

Choral Score - $10
Orchestra Score - $35
Orchestra Parts - $135

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