Everything music from a perspective of a public
school music teacher with subject integration
(especially art, history, and literature) as a focus
to help teach the Common Core Curriculum.
Showing posts with label holiday music 2012. Show all posts
Showing posts with label holiday music 2012. Show all posts
More than most songs of the holiday season, "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" has been a perennial favorite for 65 years because, in contrast to the title, it's more than just a Merry Little Christmas song. This isn't merely another Santa-mental jolly tune describing reindeer and elves. Rather, it conveys the undercurrent of melancholy and sadness that is the flipside of holiday jollity. It's that most extraordinary of things, a Merry Christmas jingle in a minor key – if Rodgers and Hart had written a Christmas song, this would be it. The song was written for the 1944 Meet Me in St. Louis,
Hugh Martin, right, with songwriting partner Ralph Blane in the 1940's.
the song is integral to the film's plot, in which
a family living in St. Louis at the turn of the century is compelled to relocate to New York. They're distraught at the prospect of leaving their beloved home town at the time of the year when most traditional families would normally be returning home rather than leaving there. Martin and Blane did a marvelous job mixing the two emotions and came up with a surprisingly potent Christmas cocktail. Hugh Martin had originally been an arranger and singer in a vocal quartet called the Martins, and producer Arthur Freed
had admired the way he was able to
take a traditional piece of material like "Skip to My Lou" and modernize it in a hip and contemporary fashion. The two generally worked as a team, and individually within that team; Martin wrote most if not all of "Merry Little Christmas" himself.
Although much of the score to Meet Me in
St. Louis consisted of authentic period
music, Martin and Blane were asked to
write three new songs. They proceeded
to bat 1.000; all three became instant hits,
and, over the long haul, popular classics:
"The Trolley Song," "The Boy Next Door"
and "Have Yourself
Merry Little Christmas."
Ironically, "Merry Little Christmas"
almost didn’t make it into the picture. Martin
and Blane wrote the song for leading lady
Judy Garland
to sing to child actress
Margaret O'Brien,
playing her younger sister. The original
lyric by Martin and Blane was, as Ralph Blane later told film historian Hugh Fordin: "Have yourself a merry little Christmas, It may be your last. Next year we will all be living in the past."
The song was supposed to be poignant, but this was downright depressing. The first to realize this was Garland herself, who refused to sing "Merry Little Christmas" in its original state. She pointed out that the minor key melody sounded sad, the bittersweet lyric was very sad and the scene itself in the film was even sadder. She was convinced that it was just too much of a downer, and the audience would soon start leaving the theater. However, Martin stuck to his guns and would not consider changing the words. With Garland refusing to sing it and Martin refusing to alter the lyric, it looked like the entire song would be dropped. Finally, the leading man, Tom Drake, talked some sense into Martin, convincing him that this was a really great song which could be very important – but not if it wasn’t in the film! Martin and Blane relented and changed the lyric to the slightly more optimistic one we know today, "Let your heart be light Next year all your troubles will be out of sight."
The boy next door was right. "Merry Little Christmas" was the hit of the film and an Academy Award nominee. Just as Meet Me in St. Louis, was the first great Americana musical (in the wake of Oklahoma!) to capture the patriotic mood of the WWII era, "Merry Little Christmas" was the first great Christmas song to follow Irving Berlin’s "White Christmas" (1942). And, like Berlin’s song, it was universal in its appeal. Over the next seven decades, "Merry Little Christmas" was sung not only by nearly every notable traditional pop vocalist on every Christmas album or TV special ever made, but also by hundreds of country singers, soul singers, opera singers and even rock bands and the Muppets. No one was more patriotic than Hugh Martin himself. As he later told singer-scholar Michael Feinstein, after his work on the score was completed, Martin enlisted in the U.S. army. One day, a few months later, Martin was marching on maneuvers when he happened to hear his own tune, "The Trolley Song" being played by a military band. He turned and said to the GI marching next to him, "Hey! I wrote that!," at which point the soldier called back to him, "Yeah! And I’m Myrna Loy!" Meet Me in St. Louis Part One (Lux Radio Theater) Judy Garland and Margaret O'Brien