Bells and birds
Nov. 25th, 2008 09:06 pmI was looking for Christmas music on Amazon and noticed the Russian-sounding name of the composer of "Carol of the Bells," Mykola Dmytrovich Leontovych. I don't know of many carols from Russia (or Ukraine, as it turns out). So I Googled for him, and I found something interesting.
'Carol of the Bells' wasn't originally a Christmas song
Rice University anthropology student is studying the song's geneaology
There's also a Wikipedia article on it, with a somewhat more technical take, and the Ukrainian lyrics.
EDIT: I have changed the link from advertisement-filled Science Blog to Rice News, which looks to be the original source of the article.
'Carol of the Bells' wasn't originally a Christmas song
Rice University anthropology student is studying the song's geneaology
Although "Carol of the Bells" has become a popular tune during the holidays, the original lyrics had nothing to do with Christmas. The song with a haunting four-note melody was originally a Ukranian folk song written as a "winter well-wishing song," said Anthony Potoczniak, a Rice University anthropology graduate student who is studying the song's history.The article is from 2004, and it goes on.
Written in 1916 by Ukrainian composer Mykola Leontovich and titled "Shchedryk," the song tells the tale of a swallow flying into a household to proclaim the plentiful year that the family will have. The song's title is derived from the Ukrainian word "shchedryj," which means "bountiful."
There's also a Wikipedia article on it, with a somewhat more technical take, and the Ukrainian lyrics.
EDIT: I have changed the link from advertisement-filled Science Blog to Rice News, which looks to be the original source of the article.
(no subject)
Date: 2008-11-27 11:30 am (UTC)Not sure what caught my eye about your post, but I was fascinated by the story. I went and looked up the Ukrainian lyrics and read the wikipedia page.
Thanks again for the information!