I Wonder as I Wander
The Christmas music season is drawing to a close. My favorite classical station stopped the carols cold-turkey on December 26, though we'll be singing holiday hymns at church for another couple of weeks. Time to give a nod to a song I've heard often this season, a relatively new entry to the Christmas canon, "I Wonder as I Wander."
It's a haunting melody in a minor key, more "We Three Kings" than "Joy to the World." But it is lovely and soft, a light snowfall on a still night. And ... it was written by a Kentuckian, John Jacob Niles, a noted balladeer who collected Appalachian tunes later popularized by folk singers in the 1950s and '60s.
I met John Jacob Niles several times at a Christmas Eve gathering hosted annually by my kindergarten teacher, Grace Cramer Webber, who became a friend of my mother's. Like Niles, Webber was both behind and ahead of her time.
It isn't easy to have your carol enter the Christmas canon — but Niles' song has done just that. As I listen I wonder, too. Not just about the birth of the baby Jesus, but about the power of music to take us places we otherwise couldn't go.
It's a haunting melody in a minor key, more "We Three Kings" than "Joy to the World." But it is lovely and soft, a light snowfall on a still night. And ... it was written by a Kentuckian, John Jacob Niles, a noted balladeer who collected Appalachian tunes later popularized by folk singers in the 1950s and '60s.
I met John Jacob Niles several times at a Christmas Eve gathering hosted annually by my kindergarten teacher, Grace Cramer Webber, who became a friend of my mother's. Like Niles, Webber was both behind and ahead of her time.
It isn't easy to have your carol enter the Christmas canon — but Niles' song has done just that. As I listen I wonder, too. Not just about the birth of the baby Jesus, but about the power of music to take us places we otherwise couldn't go.
Labels: holidays
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