Texarkana Gazette

Singers mark carol’s birthday

- By Deepti Hajela

NEW YORK—One of the most famous songs of Christmas was celebrated Tuesday as it approaches its 200th anniversar­y, with a concert at the New York City church where “Silent Night” is believed to have been sung in the United States for the first time and where a priest was the first to publish an English translatio­n of the Austrian carol.

The performanc­e of the carol by Austria’s Kroll Family Singers and ensembles from Trinity Church took place at the Alexander Hamilton memorial in the Trinity churchyard. The singers stood in front of the memorial in the darkened yard as onlookers gathered and horns from passing cars beeped on nearby streets.

The Kroll singers opened the carol with verses in the original German, followed by the Trinity singers with verses in languages including French, Spanish, and finally English. After the outdoor performanc­e, they went inside the church, where the Austrian group sang some other songs before they finished with another rendition of “Silent Night.”

The song resonates with people because of its simple melody and straightfo­rward message, said Elisabeth Frontull, a member of the Kroll group.

“You sing it from the bottom of your heart; that’s the reason why the song is so popular,” she said.

Organizers of the event said it’s believed the song was first sung at the Trinity Church location in 1839 by the Rainer family singers, a traveling singing group from Austria.

“Silent Night” initially debuted as a musical piece in December 1818, with words by Joseph Mohr, a priest, and music by Franz Xaver Gruber, in Oberndorf, Austria.

In 1859, a priest at Trinity, John Freeman Young, published the first English translatio­n of three verses of the carol, including the well-known first verse that ends with “sleep in heavenly peace.”

It has become one of the most recorded songs in the world and declared as part of Austria’s cultural heritage.

To mark its anniversar­y, Austrian tourism organizati­ons put together a number of events in that country, including concert and exhibition­s.

The concert at Trinity—a historic church and tourist attraction that survived the destructio­n of the nearby World Trade Center in 2001—was the only stateside event done through that effort, said Sigrid Pichler, spokeswoma­n for New York City’s Austrian Tourist Office.

“It touches the hearts of people deeply,” she said. “It’s a very simple song, it has an eternal message of peace. It is also something that the whole world needs to hear.”

 ?? AP Photo/Julie Jacobson ?? ■ The Kroell Family Singers, center, sing “Silent Night” with the Choir of Trinity Wall Street and Trinity Youth Chorus during a celebratio­n of the anniversar­y of the song Tuesday at Trinity Church in New York. “Silent Night,” one of the most famous songs of the Christmas season, is being celebrated as it approaches its 200th anniversar­y. Written and sung in Austria in December 1818, the song was first performed in the U.S. in 1839 at the Hamilton Memorial on the church’s grounds by an Austrian family of traveling singers.
AP Photo/Julie Jacobson ■ The Kroell Family Singers, center, sing “Silent Night” with the Choir of Trinity Wall Street and Trinity Youth Chorus during a celebratio­n of the anniversar­y of the song Tuesday at Trinity Church in New York. “Silent Night,” one of the most famous songs of the Christmas season, is being celebrated as it approaches its 200th anniversar­y. Written and sung in Austria in December 1818, the song was first performed in the U.S. in 1839 at the Hamilton Memorial on the church’s grounds by an Austrian family of traveling singers.

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