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Soundprint_news_09-00052: A Little Before Tis Day/Mummers at the Door

Series: SOUNDPRINT weekly series (News Hole Compatible)
From: Soundprint
Length: 00:59:00

Soundprint_09-52_news: A Little Before Tis Day/Mummers at the Door. Read the full description.

Darklogo1_small his program is offered to current SOUNDPRINT MEMBER stations as a free alternative to our weekly (full 59 minute) Soundprint feed. If you are interested in broadcasting this Newshole-Friendly version of Soundprint, but are not a Soundprint Member Station, please contact us (BEFORE DOWNLOADING) about a trial period or other options at  (301)317-0110 . Thanks for reading carefully!!

**** PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS ****

Mummers at the Door
Long before Santa, Bing Crosby and the Mattel Toy Company stole the occasion, even before Christianity itself kidnapped it, the Winter Solstice was celebrated with seasonal ritual. One ancient solstice custom is Mummering. Still practiced annually in many parts of England and Ireland, this great-grand-daddy of Halloween masquerade died out in much of Canada and the United States centuries ago. In North America today it is a popular part of Christmas now only in Newfoundland and Pennsylvania.

On any night during the twelve days of Christmas you may hear a pounding on your door and strange indrawn voices shouting outside: Any mummers allowed? Whether allowed or not, the mummers will tumble in, loud and masked and rowdy and possibly threatening, turning normal household decorum upside down. They may be friends or complete strangers, and unless you can guess their identities you cannot be sure who is behind the mask or whether their intentions are benign. They are certain to track muddy boots across your carpet, play music, demand drink and act outrageously. All over Newfoundland, these rough-and-tumble spirits of the ancient winter solstice have survived despite the religious and commercial hoopla of modern Christmas.

A Little Before 'Tis Day 
There is a centuries old caroling tradition that was thought to be lost, but discovered to still exist in a tiny village in Newfoundland. The villagers sing the New Year's carol, brought from Europe with the first settlers, and handed down through the ages in the community's oral tradition. There is no written transcription of the melody or its origin. For generations villagers have walked from house to house, entered darkened kitchens after midnight, and sung the carol as occupants listened in the darkness. Producer Chris Brookes tracks down the village carolers and follows them on their rounds as they sing their medieval melodies.

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Piece Description

his program is offered to current SOUNDPRINT MEMBER stations as a free alternative to our weekly (full 59 minute) Soundprint feed. If you are interested in broadcasting this Newshole-Friendly version of Soundprint, but are not a Soundprint Member Station, please contact us (BEFORE DOWNLOADING) about a trial period or other options at  (301)317-0110 . Thanks for reading carefully!!

**** PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONS ****

Mummers at the Door
Long before Santa, Bing Crosby and the Mattel Toy Company stole the occasion, even before Christianity itself kidnapped it, the Winter Solstice was celebrated with seasonal ritual. One ancient solstice custom is Mummering. Still practiced annually in many parts of England and Ireland, this great-grand-daddy of Halloween masquerade died out in much of Canada and the United States centuries ago. In North America today it is a popular part of Christmas now only in Newfoundland and Pennsylvania.

On any night during the twelve days of Christmas you may hear a pounding on your door and strange indrawn voices shouting outside: Any mummers allowed? Whether allowed or not, the mummers will tumble in, loud and masked and rowdy and possibly threatening, turning normal household decorum upside down. They may be friends or complete strangers, and unless you can guess their identities you cannot be sure who is behind the mask or whether their intentions are benign. They are certain to track muddy boots across your carpet, play music, demand drink and act outrageously. All over Newfoundland, these rough-and-tumble spirits of the ancient winter solstice have survived despite the religious and commercial hoopla of modern Christmas.

A Little Before 'Tis Day 
There is a centuries old caroling tradition that was thought to be lost, but discovered to still exist in a tiny village in Newfoundland. The villagers sing the New Year's carol, brought from Europe with the first settlers, and handed down through the ages in the community's oral tradition. There is no written transcription of the melody or its origin. For generations villagers have walked from house to house, entered darkened kitchens after midnight, and sung the carol as occupants listened in the darkness. Producer Chris Brookes tracks down the village carolers and follows them on their rounds as they sing their medieval melodies.

Broadcast History

This News-Hole-friendly version of SOUNDPRINT is produced in tandem with our weekly Soundprint series, which feeds Friday afternoons via PRSS and is aired on member stations throughout the following week

Please note:

This program is offered to current SOUNDPRINT MEMBER stations as a free alternative to our weekly (full 59 minute) Soundprint feed. If you are interested in broadcasting this Newshole-Friendly version of Soundprint, but are not a Soundprint Member Station, please contact us (BEFORE DOWNLOADING) about a trial period or other options at (301)317-0110. Thanks for reading carefully!!

Timing and Cues

Program Time: 59:00
File Format: MPEG 1 Layer II (.mp2) 256kbps from 16 bit 44.1kHz
File Size: 108 MB

SOUNDPRINT 1: A Little Before 'Tis Day
SOUNDPRINT 2: Mummers at the Door
SOUNDPRINT (NewsHole-Friendly) will be available Fridays at 1200 Eastern Time via PRX, the Public Radio Exchange, at: www.prx.org/series/11955

Do NOT pull left channel only. Sum to Mono is OK

***DETAILED CLOCK RUNDOWN***

00:00 - 00:59 SOUNDPRINT Billboard
00:59 - 01:00 BLACK
01:00 - 06:00 NEWS HOLE
06:00 - 28:59 SOUNDPRINT 1:
-[In cue: "Welcome to Soundprint, I'm Lisa Simeone..."]
-[Out cue: "...up next on SOUNDPRINT"] @ 28:54
-[followed by :05 theme music. Please note that music ends cold]
28:59 - 29:00 1 second black
29:00 - 29:59 Music bed[an opportunity for stations to do local forward promoting and underwriting credits]
29:59 -30:00 1 second black
30:00 - 58:29 SOUNDPRINT 2:
-[In cue: "Welcome to Soundprint, I'm Lisa Simeone..."]
-[Out cue: "...I'm Lisa Simeone"] @ 58:26
-[followed by 00:03 theme music. Please note that music ends cold]
58:29 - 58:30 1 second black
58:30 - 58:59 Music bed[an opportunity for stations to do local forward promoting and underwriting credits]
58:59 - 59:00 1 second black

Additional Credits

SOUNDPRINT is produced by the Soundprint Media Center, INC in association with WAMU and American University.

Related Website

http://www.soundprint.org