| The Truth from AboveThis is the text and tune from the Oxford Book of Carols [#68] edited by Percy Dearmer, Ralph Vaughan Williams, and Martin Shaw (Oxford University Press, 1928). The setting is from Vaughan Williams.
 Babe of BethlehemChristmas Carols New and Old edited by  Rev. Henry Ramsden Bramley and Sir John Stainer (London: Novello & Co., 1871, #XXXI, pp. 66-67).
 The First NowellI first heard this at a Wassail party near Burnley in Lancashire. It's the familiar Yorkshire tune to the song "Young Banker" from the Frank Kidson MSS, popularized by the Watersons.
 The Cherry Tree CarolNew Oxford Book of Carols [NOBC] #128-I, p.440-1.
 LondonWe are indebted to Nym Cooke's invaluable compilation, Awake to Joy: Christmas Carols for Part-Singing, (Lyme, NH: Toad Hill Music Engraving for the Compiler, 1995) both for Timothy Swan's setting of "London" (from his New England Harmony, Northampton, MA, 1801) and for his suggestion that Swan may have based the text on the first verse of William Billings' "Shiloh," (also in Awake to Joy) from which we took a second verse.
 The Blessings of MaryNOBC #131-III, p.460-461 collected by Richard Chase from Will Brady of Carthage, NC (Journal of American Folklore, Vol. 48, No. 390, 1935).
 I Saw a MaidenNOBC 109-II, p. 389. This Edgar Pettiman's (1865-1943) setting of a Fifteenth century text (Sloan Manuscript, British Library 2593) using a Basque tune.
 ChariotsJohn Kirkpatrick was commissioned to write a couple of new carols for a "Wassail" tour organized by Folkworks in the north of England in 1995. One was this new classic, through-composed for band, solo voices and a small choir.
 The Holly and the IvySometimes to the annoyance of our friends and family, who always want to hear "their favorite," we have learned and performed several different versions of this carol. This one was an internet gift. David de la Barre sent me a scanned copy of a four-part setting labeled only as an "Old French Melody, 1861." He had it from Take Joy: The Tasha Tudor Christmas Book, (New York: Philomel Books, 1966).
 Joy to the WorldFrom Mike Bailey and Rollo Woods, West Gallery Carols and Anthems, published by the singing group, The Madding Crowd, 1991, pp. 11-15. The anthem is by Thomas Shoel of Montacute, Somerset based on Isaac Watts' Psalm 98. This setting is from Nosworthy TN2, similar to others in MSS from Widecombe.
 Christèmas Hath Made An End or Well-a-DayAlso known as "The Yorkshire Gooding Carol," this was sung by children door-to-door bearing a tree on Christmas morning. Our setting is based on the one from the NOBC #154, p.530-1.
 Ditchling CarolAccording to Vic Gammon ("Hail Happy Morn: Two Sussex Church Band Carols in Old Harmony," English Dance and Song, 49, no. 3, pp. 11-13) the setting here was the work of Peter Parsons who died in 1901.  Gammon collated the text from several local MSS.  Since the release of this recording, we have discovered that the poem is the work of William Robert Spencer (1769-1834), a grandson of the 3rd Duke of Marlborough. He published it in his Poems (1811).
 Time to Remember the PoorA remarkable tune from Kidson's Yorkshire collection, this time from his Traditional Tunes (pp. 170-171; see above #3). The text is found on broadsides though we couldn't improve on the set used by Dave Townsend and the Mellstock Band on their recording Tenants of the Earth.
 Stevens Family WaysailFrom the collector, Gwilym Davies, in his article "I'll give you the Waysailing Bowl, the Gloucestershire Waysailing Bowl," English Dance and Song, 50, No. 4, pp. 2-3.
 Sound, Sound Your Instruments of JoyA new setting by New England composer Bruce Randall from Nym Cooke's Awake to Joy: Christmas Carols for Part-Singing. Additional verses are from NOBC (p. 321).
 A Happy New YearCollected by Cecil Sharp from Frederick Grossman of Langport in Somerset in 1909 [#368B, p. 506 in Vol. II of Cecil Sharp's Collection of English Folk Songs, Maud Karpeles (Ed.), Oxford University Press, 1974].
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