ermingarden: C-3PO (sw: threepio)
I'd have tried to post a fic today, or at least put together a rec list...if it weren't the middle of final exams. But I hope you'll enjoy this bizarrely endearing song by The Mountain Goats:



ETA: [personal profile] atamascolily pointed out that [personal profile] lucymonster has written a fic based on this song, "Specifically Just Their Bones," and it is an experience.

ETA 2: Someone named...uh..."Willy Wanker" made an incredible fanvid to this song:

ermingarden: rabbit playing a harp, captioned "make your own kind of music" (musical rabbit)
The antiphons used at Vespers for the last seven days of Advent are known as the "O Antiphons" and date from at least the eighth century, and possibly farther back. Each begins with a different title for the Messiah, largely drawn from Isaiah:

O Sapientia – O Wisdom (see Is. 11:2-3)
O Adonai (see Is. 33:22)
O radix Jesse – O Root of Jesse (Is. 11:1, 10)
O clavis David – O Key of David (Is. 22:22)
O oriens – O Dayspring (see Is. 9:2)
O rex gentium – O King of Nations (see Is. 2:4)
O Emmanuel – O God-is-with-us (Is. 7:14)

Reading backward from Christmas Eve, the first letters of the titles spell out the Latin phrase ero cras – "I will be [here] tomorrow!"

The verses of the classic Advent hymn (carol?) "Veni, Veni, Emmanuel/O Come, O Come, Emmanuel" are drawn from the O Antiphons, and just the other day I ran across a lovely arrangement by Michael John Trotta that incorporates the "ero cras" acronym in a very neat way (though the on-screen translations in the video are...loose):

Gaudete!

Dec. 12th, 2021 12:10 pm
ermingarden: rabbit playing a harp, captioned "make your own kind of music" (musical rabbit)
It's the third Sunday of Advent: Gaudete Sunday!

Gaudete Sunday is one of my favorite days in the liturgical year. Gaudete means Rejoice! Advent is a penitential season, like Lent; the next-to-last Sunday of Advent, though, is a sort of celebratory foretaste of Christmas joy. That's reflected in the day's liturgical color, pink, which is a lightening or softening of the penitential purple.

It's also a perfect day to sing my favorite Christmas carol of all, "Gaudete, Christus est natus!" This year I made a Spotify playlist solely comprised of half a dozen different versions of the carol:


And here are the lyrics: Read more... )

I have a term paper due by midnight tomorrow and exams Tuesday and Thursday, and I'm currently running on too little sleep and too much coffee, so I haven't exactly been feeling joyful. But Gaudete Sunday reminds me to take a breath and remember the many, many reasons I have to rejoice.
A gif of an Advent wreath with three candles lit and flickering
ermingarden: medieval image of a bird with a tonsured human head and monastic hood (Default)
Hard to believe it'll be October tomorrow! The weather is finally starting to feel like fall.

Nominations for Yuletide just closed. I nominated The Glass Bead Game by Hermann Hesse, Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro, and the Templar Knight Mysteries series by Maureen Ash. I'm very excited for the exchange this year! Are you planning to participate? What fandoms did you nominate?

My evidence professor told us the hilarious story of the Phantom of Heilbronn today. Between 1993 and 2009, one unknown woman's DNA was recovered from 40 crime scenes across Austria, France, and Germany, including multiple murders, mystifying investigators and leading to suspicions of a serial killer. The mysterious "Phantom" turned out to be a worker at the factory that manufactured the cotton swabs used to collect DNA samples.

Finally, it's a bit early in the year, but I hope you'll enjoy the most beautiful rendition of the Hallelujah Chorus I've ever heard:

ermingarden: rabbit playing a harp, captioned "make your own kind of music" (musical rabbit)
I listened to the band The Mountain Goats a lot as a moderately angsty high schooler, not at all in undergrad, and have started listening to them again as a significantly less angsty law student. (The decline in angst can be attributed almost entirely to pharmaceutical intervention - better living through chemistry and all that.) It's interesting how different my relationship to TMG's music is now than it was before. Listening to some of my old favorites, I remember how much I used to relate to those songs and am very grateful that I no longer feel the same way.

The band is premiering a second video recording of the "Jordan Lake Sessions" (they got together and recorded those in August) tonight at 9:30 EST on YouTube here. I stumbled on the first recording, which premiered last night, about halfway through. YouTube has a realtime chat function during "premieres", and seeing people reacting to the video created an unexpectedly strong feeling of connection. In the isolation of the pandemic, it was somehow exactly what I needed.

A current favorite is "Never Quite Free":

...It's okay to find the faith to saunter forward
With no fear of shadows spreading where you stand
And you'll breathe easier just knowing
That the worst is all behind you
And the waves that tossed the raft all night
Have set you on dry land...


And, of course, "The Ultimate Jedi Who Wastes All the Other Jedi and Eats Their Bones", a song that starts out philosophical before becoming pretty silly (but somehow poignant nevertheless, in a very Terry Pratchett-esque way):

Stay true to the path young Jedi
Cleave to the precepts you’ve been given
Remember those who went before and cleared a way for you
Let your deeds give hope and comfort to the living
Let your deeds give hope and comfort to the living

Do your best in city or in swampland
Peace over anger, honor over hate
At the end of all your days one Jedi waits for you
With the dust of Jedi bones piled high like parsnips on his plate
With the dust of Jedi bones piled up like parsnips on his plate...


Apparently John Darnielle (TMG lead singer and generally The Main Dude) is friends with Rian Johnson (director of The Last Jedi), which is a weird little factoid. Small world, I guess.

Gaudete!

Dec. 13th, 2020 03:09 pm
ermingarden: rabbit playing a harp, captioned "make your own kind of music" (musical rabbit)
Today is the third Sunday of Advent, called "Gaudete Sunday" and best known as one of only two days a year for which the liturgical color is pink. (The other is "Laetare Sunday", the fourth Sunday of Lent.)

"Gaudete!" means "Rejoice!" Advent - the four Sundays leading up to Christmas - is a penitential season, a time for solemn contemplation. But Gaudete Sunday is a day of what might be described as anticipatory joy, a foretaste of Christmas celebrations.

I feel the spirit of Gaudete Sunday this year more than ever before. The vaccine approval is a spark of light in the darkness of our COVID world. The pandemic is far from over, but the news is a reminder that it will end someday.

I love Gaudete Sunday for another, more ordinary reason, too: it shares a name with my very favorite Christmas carol! "Gaudete, Christus est Natus" is a carol dating from the 16th century. It's one of the songs on Anúna's album "Christmas Memories," which my mom played every year when I was a kid. Different artists interpret the song in many different ways, but in my opinion it should be sung fast and loud. My mom had to remind me on multiple occasions not to jump up and down next to the stereo when it came on - I was making the CD skip! Perhaps the best recommendation I can give for the song is that, even though little me demanded we play it multiple times a day for most of December, it's still one of my mom's favorites, too!

This is the version I listened to as a kid:

My favorite version these days is by The Sixteen, from their album "Christus Natus Est: An Early English Christmas." In my opinion, every track on that album is well worth listening to - it's one of my go-to Christmas albums.

These are the lyrics: Read more... )

ermingarden: rabbit playing a harp, captioned "make your own kind of music" (musical rabbit)
One of the ways of maintaining community that's sustained me so far in lockdown is participation in my university parish's virtual choir. For Mass today, we recorded the absolutely gorgeous sixteenth-century motet "If Ye Love Me" by Thomas Tallis; our version is on YouTube here. I think this is my favorite piece we've sung yet!

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