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The start of
Adeste Fideles.
"Adeste Fideles" is a hymn tune attributed to John Francis
Wade. The text itself has unclear beginnings, and may have been
written in the 13th century, though it has been concluded that Wade
was probably the author.[1]
The original four verses of the hymn were extended to a total of
eight, and these have been translated into many languages many
times, though the English "O Come All Ye Faithful" translation by
Frederick
Oakeley[2] is
particularly widespread.
Tune
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Before the emergence of John Francis Wade as the probable
composer, the tune had been purported to be written by several
musicians, from John Reading and his son to Handel,
including a Portuguese musician, Marcos Antonio da Fonseca, who wasn't born
until after the tune was first published. There are several similar
musical themes written around that time, though it can be hard to
determine whether these were written in imitation of the hymn, the
hymn was based on them, or they are totally unconnected.
The earliest existing manuscript shows both words and tune. John
Francis Wade included it in his own publication of Cantus
Diversi (1751). It was published again in the 1760 edition of
Evening Offices of the Church. It also appeared in Samuel Webbe's An
Essay on the Church Plain
Chant (1782).
Text
The original text has been from time to time attributed to
various groups and individuals, including St. Bonaventure in the 13th century or King
John IV
of Portugal in the 17th, though it was more commonly believed
that the text was written by an order of monks, the Cistercian, German, Portuguese and Spanish orders have, at various times been given
credit.
The original text consisted of four Latin verses, and it was
with these that the hymn was originally published. The Abbé Etienne Jean Francois
Borderies wrote an additional three verses in the 18th century;
these are normally printed as the third to fifth of seven verses,
while another, anonymous, additional Latin verse is rarely printed.
The text has been translated innumerable times, but the most used
version today is the English "O Come, All Ye Faithful". This is a
combination of one of Frederick Oakeley's translations of
the original four verses and William Thomas Brooke's of the three
additional ones, which was first published in Murray's
Hymnal in 1852.
King John
IV
The most commonly named Portuguese author is King John IV of
Portugal (Portuguese: João IV de Portugal,
pronounced [ʒuˈɐ̃ũ]). "The Musician King" (1603-1656, came
to the throne in 1640) was a patron of music and the arts, and a
considerably sophisticated writer on music; in addition, he was a
composer, and during his reign he collected one of the largest
libraries in the world (destroyed in the Lisbon earthquake of
1755). The first part of his musical work was published in 1649. He
founded a Music School in Vila Viçosa that "exported" musicians to
Spain and Italy and it was there at his Vila Viçosa palace that the
two manuscripts of the "Portuguese Hymn"
have been found. Those manuscripts (1640) predate Wade's
eighteenth-century manuscript. Among the King's writings is a
Defense of Modern Music (Lisbon, 1649). In the same year
(1649) he had a huge struggle to get instrumental music approved by
the Vatican for use in the Catholic Church. His other famous
composition is a setting of the Crux fidelis, a work
that remains highly popular during Lent amongst church choirs.
Jacobite
connection
The hymn has been interpreted as a Jacobite birth ode to Bonnie
Prince Charlie.[3]
Professor Bennett Zon, head of music at Durham
University, claims the carol is actually a birth ode to Bonnie
Prince Charlie, the secret political code being decipherable by
the "faithful" — supposedly the Jacobites, with Bethlehem a common
Jacobite cipher for England and Regem Angelorum a pun on
Angelorum (Angels) and Anglorum (English).[3]
From the 1740s to 1770s the earliest forms of the carol commonly
appeared in English Roman Catholic liturgical books close to prayers for the
exiled Old Pretender. In the books by Wade it was often decorated
with Jacobite floral imagery, as were other liturgical texts with
coded Jacobite meanings.[4]
Performance
In performance verses are often omitted, either because the hymn
is too long in its entirety or because the words are unsuitable for
the day on which they are sung. For example the eighth anonymous
verse is only sung on Epiphany, if at all; while the last
verse of the original is normally reserved for Christmas day or midnight Mass.
In the United
Kingdom and United States it is often sung today in
an arrangement by Sir David Willcocks, which was originally
published in 1961 by Oxford University Press in the
first book in the Carols for Choirs series. This
arrangement makes use of the basic harmonisation from The English Hymnal but adds a soprano descant in verse 6 (verse 3 in the original)
with its reharmonised organ accompaniment, and a last verse harmonisation in
verse 7 (verse 4 in the original), which is sung in unison.
This carol has served as the second-last hymn sung at the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols in King's College, Cambridge,
after the last lesson from Chapter 1 of the Gospel of
John.
Cover
versions
- The Fray (2009)
- Andrea
Bocelli recorded the song for three different albums, his first
classical album Viaggio Italiano in 1995, his 1999
album Sacred
Arias, and later for his first christmas album, My Christmas, in
2009.
- Bing Crosby
performed it, singing the first verse in Latin.[5]
- Victor Hely-Hutchinson included
this carol in the first and last movements of his Carol
Symphony.
- Franz Liszt
wrote a transcription as the fourth movement of his
Weihnachtsbaum cycle (S.186).
- John
Williams included the piece in the Home Alone 2: Lost in New
York movie as part of the concert taking place at Carnegie Hall.
(Titled in the soundtrack, "Christmas at Carnegie Hall.")
- The French organist-composer Alexandre Guilmant included it in
his Offertoire sur deux Noels for organ
- This song was reportedly the favorite Christmas hymn of U.S.
President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
- The David
Willcocks arrangement of the carol has been recorded by many
choirs, most notably the Choir of King's College,
Cambridge for which it was composed. Several King's College
carol recordings, including the 1984 collection O Come All Ye
Faithful have included this arrangement. However, the choir
has also recorded the descants of Philip Ledger and Stephen
Cleobury for its other albums of Christmas carols.
- The operatic
pop group Amici
Forever recorded a version for their debut album, including the
Willcocks descant.
- Frank
Sinatra sings an English version on the album "Old Fashioned
Christmas".
- Bob Dylan sings an
Latin/English version on the album Christmas In The Heart.
- Luciano
Pavarotti sings the Latin version on his 1990 album Oh Holy
Night.
- The
Chieftains recorded it for their 1991 album, The Bells
of Dublin.
- Luther
Vandross recorded it as the last track on his 1995 album
This Is Christmas
- In Swedish, two lyrics versions exists "O
kommen, I trogne" and "Dagen är kommen". Swedish pop singer Carola
Häggkvist covered "Dagen är kommen" on her 1999 Christmas album
"Jul i
Betlehem".
- Angela
Gheorghiu sings a Latin version on her album "Mysterium -
Sacred Arias" from 2001.
- US rock group Twisted Sister covered the song as "O
Come All Ye Faithful" on their 2006 Christmas album "A Twisted
Christmas", arranged in the style of their 1984 hit song "We're Not
Gonna Take It". "Adeste Fideles" is said to have inspired them
to "We're Not Gonna Take It".
- Celine Dion
performed this song on her 1998 Christmas album "These Are Special Times".
- Bruno
Pelletier recorded the Latin version of the song for his 2003
album "Concert de Noël".
- American Symphonic rock band Trans-Siberian Orchestra,
known as fond of Christmas themes, has covered it twice: in Christmas Eve and Other
Stories and in The Lost Christmas Eve
albums, both times in instrumental.
- English Folk rock band Blackmore's Night recorded the song
for Winter
Carols album in 2006.
- American country music singer Toby Keith covered the song as "O Come All
Ye Faithful" on his 2007 album A Classic
Christmas.
- Irish singer Enya recorded the
song for her Sounds of the Season: The Enya Holiday
Collection album project.
- Harry
Connick, Jr. in his album from 2008, What a Night! A Christmas
Album.
- Bradley
Joseph in his 2008 album, Classic
Christmas.
- Weezer in their 2008
digital album, "Christmas With Weezer".
- A Norwegian version is called "Å, kom
nå med lovsang".
- In 2008 Faith Hill
covered the song on her Joy To The World album.
- The Brady
Bunch covered the song on their 1970 album Christmas with The Brady
Bunch.
- Rob Halford
covered the song on his solo album Halford III
- Winter Songs
- Swedish singer Charlotte Perrelli covered the song
in Swedish on her 2008 Christmas album Rimfrostjul
- The Three
Tenors sang the first verse in Latin and the second verse in
English on the Three Tenors Christmas CD, recorded in Vienna in
1999.
The
Portuguese Hymn
The hymn was known for a while as the Portuguese Hymn after the
Duke of Leeds in
1795 heard the hymn being sung at the Portuguese embassy in London
and assumed that it had originated from Portugal.[1]
The translation that he heard differs greatly from the
Oakeley-Brooke translation.
References
- Musica Sacra em Minas Gerais no século XVIII, ISSN nº
1676-7748 - n25 1998, Professor José Maria Neves
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