By BBC Music Magazine

Published: Thursday, 02 December 2021 at 12:00 am


Mendelssohn and his Harked Herald Angels aside, the carol book is noticeably short on well-known composers. Of the really famous carol tunes, there’s Holst’s setting of In the Bleak Midwinter and… that’s about it. Yet these are some of the most famous tunes ever written. Millions of people worldwide are more than familiar with the melodies to Once in Royal David’s City and Ding Dong! Merrily on High, which surely means their composers must be household names? Sadly not.

 

From John Henry Hopkins Junior to Thoinot Arbeau, it’s time to set the record straight. Here we take a look at the composers of 11 of our best known Christmas carol tunes. Some are wonderful, some a little weird, but all deserve to be better known.

The best Christmas carol composers

Henry John Gauntlett, 1805-76

Famous for: Once in Royal David’s City

Henry John Gauntlett wasn’t an easy man to like. He once wrote a letter to the precentor of Durham Cathedral criticising one of his works, enclosing an ‘improved’ version. He was forthright from the start: his father, the vicar at a church in Olney, had decided Henry’s sisters would learn to play the organ for services. Henry, though, had other ideas and learned the instrument himself, becoming organist in 1815. In the 1830s he became interested in organ design, and patented the electric action – a mechanism which was central to an (unsuccessful) attempt to play all the organs at the 1851 Great Exhibition simultaneously. He was respected both as an organist – he performed at the premiere of Mendelssohn’s Elijah in Birmingham Town Hall – and as a composer. In addition to ‘Irby’, the tune to Once in Royal, Gauntlett wrote over 10,000 hymns, including ‘St Albinus’ (Jesus lives! thy terrors now) and ‘St Fulbert’ (Ye choirs of new Jerusalem).