
All is Calm: The Christmas Truce of 1914
Classics Today
Artistic Quality: 10; Sound Quality: 10
David Vernier
If
you're looking for a truly unique and engaging Christmas/holiday recording,
you shouldn't miss this new release from the 9-member professional male
vocal ensemble Cantus. Billed as a "radio musical drama",
All is Calm presents songs, poetry, letters, and journal excerpts relating
to the extraordinary World War I incident known as "the Christmas
Truce", in which on Christmas Eve, 1914, soldiers from the trenches
on both sides of the front lines in Belgium spontaneously initiated a cease-fire
like no other, a celebration not only of Christmas--carols were sung back
and forth, trees were lit with candles, food and drink was passed around,
pictures were taken, a game of soccer was played--but also of the basic
humanity all of these men shared, as they helped each other bury the dead
that for days had lain unattended across no man's land.
With first-rate new
musical arrangements by Cantus members Erick Lichte and Timothy C. Takach,
and with dramatic recitations by members of Minneapolis-based Theater Latté
Da, whose artistic director Peter Rothstein conceived the project, the
program artfully leads, from the point of view of the soldiers, from a
Prologue (a beautiful rendition of the song "Will Ye Go to
Flanders?") through various stages of the men's experience at the
beginning of war--"Optimistic Departure"--to the "Grim Reality" of
battle, cold, hunger, and death, and then to the events of the Christmas
truce itself. The disc closes with a "Return to Battle" and an
Epilogue.
The story is told with lots of music--contemporary
popular songs such as "It's a long way to Tipperary", "The Old Barbed Wire", "Keep
the home fires burning", as well as Christmas carols and songs "O
Tannenbaum", "Good King Wenceslas", "In dulci jubilo", "O
come, o come Emmanuel", "Minuit chrétiens" (O holy night),
and "Silent Night". As you will expect if you've ever heard a
Cantus performance, the singing is absolutely top-notch, and the spoken
parts--including words written both by "ordinary" and well-known
soldiers (namely Wilfred Owen and Siefgried Sassoon)--are equally eloquent
and moving, and are perfectly juxtaposed with and often simultaneously
performed with the music. This is a production intended to be experienced
in its entirety (although the CD is divided into separate tracks), and
indeed these performers are presenting it in concerts this season in Minneapolis
(check the Cantus website for information).
Although the remarkable events
of the Christmas Truce (in some places it lasted until New Year's!) were
not widely reported at the time (bad for the business of war) nor for decades
after, they have recently inspired a film, Joyeux
Noël, and several books,
including Silent Night by Stanley Weintraub. This excellent "radio musical drama" promises
to extend its fame to a greater audience, involving listeners with its
engaging music and affecting prose and poetry, while leaving us to ponder
the incident's underlying, poignantly provocative question: what would
happen if those sent to fight each other instead laid down their arms,
crossed the lines, shook hands, shared a beer, a meal, photographs of
their families, and sang a few songs together? [11/14/2008]