Vocal Music
- Ding Dong Merrily on High – Charles Wood (1866-1926)
- On Christmas Night – Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872-1958)
- Infant Holy, Infant Lowly – arr. David Willcocks (1919-2015)
- Christmas Mass for St. William’s – Richard Shephard (1949-2021)
- Psalm 96 (based on "Vom Himmel Hoch") – Thomas Pavlechko (b. 1962)
Instrumental Music
- Vom Himmel hoch, da komm ich her– Johann Pachelbel (1653-1706)
- In the Bleak Midwinter – Allen Orton Gibbs (1910-1996)
- Festive Flourish On 'Joy To The World' – Michael Dell (b. 1959)
Congregational Music (all hymns from The Hymnal 1982 with the exception of those marked “R” which are from Renew.)
- Hymn 83 - O come, all ye faithful (ADESTE FIDELIS)
- Hymn 87 - Hark! The herald angels sing (MENDELSSOHN)
- Hymn 96 - Angels we have heard on high (GLORIA)
- Hymn 101 - Away in a Manger (CRADLE SONG)
- Hymn 111 - Silent night, holy night (STILLE NACHT)
- Hymn 100 - Joy to the world (ANTIOCH)
Like the choral music, the organ works are all based on Christmas hymns. The first is based on a traditional German Chorale (text by Martin Luther) arranged by Johann Pachelbel of the Canon fame. It has two settings, actually. The first is a trio, with the pedal carrying the melody. The second begins as a fughetta, using the opening phrase of the hymn as its subject. It then turns into a brilliant toccata, again with the melody in the pedal.
The second organ prelude is on the tune Cranham by Gustav Holst. It is by Alabama composer Allen Orton Gibbs. She was a graduate of the Birmingham Conservatory of Music (now the Music Department of Birmingham-Southern College), where she later became a member of the faculty. An organist and pianist, for many years she was organist at McCoy United Methodist Church in Birmingham, Alabama. Her compositions include works in a variety of genres: choral anthems, organ works, vocal solos, hymn tunes, and music for handbells. Most of her compositions were written for her own use, or for friends and colleagues, or to fulfill commissions. Since her death in 1996, many of these have been published.
The closing voluntary is one of my favorite Christmas works for organ. Micahel Dell used Henri Mulet's toccata Tu Es Petra (Thou art the Rock) as an outline for his flourish on "Joy to the World." The melody can be heard as a canon, alternating between the hands and the feet
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