More baffling was Scott Weiland's The Most Wonderful Time of the Year (2011) on which the late Stone Temple Pilots growler tried a range of styles, from reggae to crooners. Ironic indie kids will most likely whip out a pair of ironic EPs at this time of year – Weezer's 2008 six-track power-pop offering Christmas With Wheezer, or the otherwise maudlin Sufjan Stevens's 2006 six-track, Songs for Christmas. The lads got in on the act, too, with Boyz II Men's 1993 work Christmas Interpretations, and NSYNC's 1998 effort Home for Christmas, not to mention Justin Bieber's Under the Mistletoe (2011). Less successful was Christina Aguilera's My Kind of Christmas (2000) and last year's Kylie Christmas from Ms Minogue. The holiday album has also become an essential right of passage for a certain breed of diva, with Mariah Carey and Céline Dion both scoring sales of more than five million with their respective offerings, 1994's Merry Christmas and 1998's These Are Special Times. Other legends to dabble in festive cheer include Barbra Streisand, with her best-selling A Christmas Album (1967) Willie Nelson, who turned in the mellow Pretty Paper in 1979 and Nobel-winner Bob Dylan, whose Christmas in the Heart (2009) was a shockingly misjudged collection of painfully rasped hymns, carols and pop songs. Avoid the chaff by picking up the 2003 compendium, Christmas With Johnny Cash. Johnny Cash also proved a Christmas perennial, releasing four seasonal albums between 19. They were collected on the utterly essential 1995 release James Brown's Funky Christmas. Groovier still is James Brown, who at the peak of his late-1960s powers released three festive albums – James Brown Sings Christmas Songs, A Soulful Christmas and Hey America It's Christmas – mixing blustery R&B workouts with soul ballads. The Beach Boys wrote six original songs for their 1964 Christmas Album, while surf-rock and festive cheer proved to be surprising bedfellows on The Ventures' Christmas Album the following year. The era's true festive classic came in 1963 in the shape of A Christmas Gift for You from Phil Spector, for which the master producer called in The Ronettes, The Crystals, Darlene Love and Bob B Soxx & the Blue Jeans for some seasonal Wall of Sound treatment.Īs the decade continued, the big stars of the day got in on the act. Less well-remembered but more entertaining, jazz legend Ella Fitzgerald's breezy swing staple Ella Wishes You a Swinging Christmas was also released in 1960. Jazz crooner Nat King Cole channelled that same chestnut-roasting charm on his 1960 album The Magic of Christmas, which shipped six million copies– still the third-best-selling Christmas album (Kenny G inexplicably outsold Cole with 1994's Miracles: The Holiday Album). He cashed in with 1945 long-player Merry Christmas, later expanded for a 1986 CD reissue. If these heavyweights were following anyone's example, it would have to be crooner Bing Crosby, whose 1941 recording of Irving Berlin's dreamy White Christmas is still the best-selling single ever, shifting up to 50 million copies. The ever-sentimental Ol' Blue Eyes continued to dabble in festive cheer until the final curtain (and beyond – check the 2004 compilation Frank Sinatra Christmas Collection, released six years after his death). Remarkably, it fared much better than the other big seasonal releases from 1957 – the markedly more conservative A Jolly Christmas from Frank Sinatra. Split into a first side of secular standards ( Santa Claus is Back in Town, White Christmas), and a second stretch of popular carols ( Silent Night, O Little Town of Bethlehem), Elvis's vintage offering remains a Yuletide favourite (the same cannot quite be said of his 1971 follow-up, Elvis Sings the Wonderful World of Christmas). The King of them all, in more ways than one, is Elvis Presley, whose 1957 release, Elvis' Christmas Album, remains the best-selling "holiday album" of all time, with 15 million copies shifted around the globe. From the hipster-pleasing holiday grooves of James Brown to the contemporary cheer of this year’s contenders, R Kelly, Neil Diamond and Kacey Musgraves, the list of performers eager to deliver some festive cheer is more bewildering than bedazzling. The Christmas album has proved to be a tough roasted chestnut to crack over the years.įew musicians emerge from the ordeal of releasing a festive single with their credibility intact, so surely only the most foolhardy (or cash-strapped) of artists would attempt a whole LP of seasonal tunes.
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