
Above you will see the first page of a song called Excelsis! Gloria! which, in common with a number of others in my two Singing Together at Christmas entries has been lost in the mists of time. If you are a musician and could find the time to play it and record it that would be incredible. Whether you can or not, I think you will find the second entry as fascinating as the first.

One of the most surprising success stories of my blog over the last 18 months has been the number of views that my Memories of Singing Together post has got. It has become the first of my posts to break through the 500 views barrier which I am extremely happy about. My two companion pieces looking at the Christmas songs from the six years of Primary School haven’t been quite as successful but they have both racked up decent numbers. The first, today, covers 1970 – 1972 and the second, tomorrow, covers 1973 – 1975. Hope you enjoy them and that you look at my original posts particularly if you can read music. For the songs that have disappeared down the side of the internet sofa (!) I have provided the sheet music and I would love to hear the songs again if anyone is able to play them. Thanks in advance!
https://davidgpearce205.blog/2023/12/01/christmas-songs-from-singing-together-1970-1972/


Just a few thoughts about this morning waking up in another hemisphere. I left the rain and the cold of England for the warmth of Australia on Wednesday. It’s my cousin’s 80th birthday on Christmas Day so we have come over to Sydney to help him celebrate.
So on Friday 13th, very much not an unlucky feeling day, I got up to see the dawn breaking over one of my favourite places. To be honest I had been up since before 3am, but 11 time zones and 21 hours of flying in less than a day will do that to you!
There were times when I wondered if I would ever see Australia again, having reluctantly left in 2005 after my Masters degree, despite having been offered a job. (Immigration rules put paid to that.) This morning I put it all to one side as I watched the city wake up, listened to the unfamiliar bird song and saw the early risers walking dogs and heading to the gym or to work.
There is something magical about the dawn of a new day in a new country. Not only your day, but your life seems to hold a number of possibilities that perhaps you lose sight of in the daily grind of job, responsibilities and doom scrolling. You see freshness and opportunities where you forgot they existed. You see your own life as having more potential, whatever stage you are in the ageing process and wherever you are in your career. The gift of that realisation cannot be overstated.
Some of you may regard these thoughts as the ‘false creation of the heat oppressed brain’ (!) and perhaps they are, but they are no less real and no less important for all that. For the first time in a long time I remembered that I am privileged to see the new day and I hope that I continue to remember that even after I have left ‘The lucky country’.


Is there anything more intrinsically connected with our Christmas memories than food? It is the time of year when we will eat special dishes and, in many cases, much more than we usually do. We have turkey with trimmings, traditional and non-traditional, special cakes, desserts and other sweet dishes. We keep special food for this special time. I cannot imagine Christmas Day sitting in the lounge waiting for someone else to cook the food as the kitchen is my territory!
The attached blogpost from 2022 reflects more on the ideas and feelings than the recipes and the way that Christmas food makes us feel. Perhaps if you read the original article it will make you think about your own relationship with Christmas in its culinary sense. Happy reading, happy cooking and may all your festive meals be a success.
https://davidgpearce205.blog/2022/12/23/christmas-cooking-and-baking/
