By BBC Music Magazine

Published: Friday, 24 December 2021 at 12:00 am


Berlioz’s magical Christmas tale (or ‘Trilogie sacrée’), L’enfance du Christ, is one of the world’s most famous pieces of festive classical music.

However, popular though it may be, it is not the most famous contribution to the Christmas choral repertoire from 19th-century France.

Six years earlier, Adolphe Adam composed his ‘Minuit, chrétiens!’, setting a poem by Placide Cappeau – under its English title with words by John Sullivan Dwight, O Holy Night has become a world favourite.

For a fairly substantial festive listen – though rather shorter than L’enfance du Christ – there’s Saint-Saëns’s Christmas Oratorio. A ten-movement work written in 1858 when the 23-year-old composer was an organist at La Madeleine in Paris, it is scored for soloists, chorus, organ, harp and strings, and in style owes much to both Bach and Berlioz.