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We all have a favorite holiday song, and certainly no lack of choices. But in Japan, it seems, everyone has the same favorite holiday song. And this year, as Lucy Craft reports, it means more than ever.In countries like Japan, where most people still identify with Buddhism and the native Shinto religion, the usual trappings of Christmas are a side note.But there s nothing low-key about one Japanese holiday tradition. This time of year, Japan goes batty for Beethoven s masterpiece Ode to Joy, the final movement of his famous Ninth Symphony. December just woul <a href=https://www.stanleymugs.us>stanley mugs</a> dn t be the end of the year, without a stirring rendition of Beethoven s Ninth. The music is so beloved in Japan, it s known affectionately as daiku -- which literally means number nine. The Beethoven craze began, strangely enough, during World War I, when German soldiers being held as prisoners in Japan sta <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.fr>gourde stanley</a> ged the very first performance of number nine here.The Japanese liked what they heard, and by the mid-20th century, number nine had become a holiday hit. Performed and sung all through the month, from concert halls to department stores, number nine is now a welcome, if predictable, gig for musicians, and conductors. I have done this more than 150 times, said <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.co.uk>stanley cups</a> conductor Yutaka Sado.Some hard-core fans even try to sing it in German. I don t know all the words, said one 9-year-old. I just fake it. For sheer scale, nothing beats the 10,000-man Number Nine Chorus, of Osaka. Talented and tone-de