Yearly Archives: 2011

A Trio of David Benoit Christmas Albums [Christmas Album Countdown]

ChristmastimeDavid Benoit has been a family favorite of ours for years.  A contemporary jazz pianist, he is unfortunately lumped into the $mooth Jazz category, yet has true jazz chops and can play circles around many of the pretenders out there today.  Very much influenced by pianist Bill Evans, Benoit’s style is melodic, yet still ear friendly even if the listener is not a jazz fanatic.  With that in mind, his two Christmas CDs have been a constant holiday treat over the years.   His track on the GRP Christmas Collection, “Carol Of The Bells,” is one of my favorites on that disc, so it was nice to discover he had a pre-GRP album, Christmastime, from 1983 that featured an earlier (but very similar) recording of this song, and eight others, which is a nice, cozy little jazz quartet date that goes down easy like a single-malt Scotch, fireside.  This disc is a bit hard to find, as it has been out of print for awhile…but is a must-have for Benoit fans.

Remembering ChristmasIn 1996 Benoit released a new recording, Remembering Christmas, which is just as ear-friendly and easygoing, yet is a bit more reflective in tone.  The tunes “Skating” and “Christmas Time Is Here” hail from the Charlie Brown Christmas soundtrack, not exactly a stretch since Benoit has been providing music for Peanuts specials for many years now (in the wake of Vince Guaraldi’s passing).  Benoit is joined by a handful of guest artists on this disc, including Earl Klugh on “Skating,” Michael Franks on “Christmas Time Is Here,” and in a piano duo performance, the great Dave Brubeck on “Hark, The Herald Angels Sing.”

40 Years: A Charlie Brown ChristmasFinally, in the role of producer and musical director, Benoit assembled a recording for Peak Records entitled 40 Years: A Charlie Brown Christmas.  This album features Benoit’s piano in more of a support role on all but three tracks, one track being “Red Baron” by The Rippingtons, and the other two featuring Benoit as the lead artist (and orchestra conductor on “Christmas Is Coming”).   The remaining tracks feature a variety of well-known names such as Vanessa Williams, Dave Koz, Brian McKnight, Rick Braun, Gerald Albright, Chaka Khan and Wayman Tisdale, among others.  This is a nice updating of Guaraldi’s classic holiday album.

Various Artists: Jingle Bell Rock (Time-Life) [Christmas Album Countdown]

The Rock 'N' Roll Era: Jingle Bell Rockin 1987, I guess I was bitten by the same CD buying bug that many were: I bought into the Time-Life “Rock ‘n’ Roll Era” series of CDs.  Thankfully I found that the musical selection on these were fine for my purposes, although the sound often suffered a bit.  It did enable me to amass a good collection of “oldies” that I otherwise never would have bought.  One surprising favorite came my way during the holidays–the compilation Jingle Bell Rock.  A couple of the Motown tracks need to be skipped (the Temptations’ “Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer” is narcoleptic at best), but for the most part it is a very enjoyable and crowd-pleasing collection of holiday favorites.

On here are tracks by Jan and Dean (“Frosty the Snowman”, rescued from obscurity), The Ventures (“Sleigh Ride”), Jack Scott (“There’s Trouble Brewin'”), The O’Jays (“Christmas Ain’t Christmas Without The One You Love”) and Dodie Stevens (“Merry, Merry Christmas Baby”).  The usual suspects are here also (“JIngle Bell Rock”, “Run, Rudolph Run” and “Rockin’ Around The Christmas Tree”) and Elton John’s “Step into Christmas” finishes out the disc with the most recent song in the collection.  You can find Jingle Bell Rock if you look hard enough, although you can find another variation or two that changes out and/or skimps on the 25 tracks that this disc offers.

Manhattan Transfer: The Christmas Album [Christmas Album Countdown]

Christmas AlbumAs I prepared to make a few notes about this “new” album, I took a look at the date on which it was released…and am still in disbelief that The Christmas Album was released almost 20 years ago!  Time flies, and yet this recording still sounds as fresh as the day it was released.  While you might expect a Manhattan Transfer recording to feature four-part vocal harmonies and jazz, they reached a bit beyond and enlisted the great Johnny Mandel to handle orchestrations and arrangements, and what you end up with is a beautifully warm and lush holiday recording that transcends musical boundaries.  The rockers and headbangers probably would never warm to it, but it is one of those nice “family” discs that, thanks to the Mandel/Tim Hauser production, can sound lush without straying into sappy Muzak.  Even Tony Bennett pops in for a guest appearance on “The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting On An Open Fire)”.  What really impressed me was the disc opening with the lesser known “Snowfall,” a wintery song penned by Claude Thornhill decades ago.  And, the album closes with the Lennon/McCartney “Goodnight.”  As with any ManTran album, the harmonies are smooth, and each of the members gets their turn in the spotlight.  Warmly recommended!

Various Artists: ¡Something Festive! [Christmas Album Countdown]

Audio CD. BF Goodrich. Something Festive. (SP19003)No music collection is without some favorite obscurities that most haven’t heard of.  Today’s album pick is no exception: this is a various artist compilation on A&M from the late 60s entitled ¡Something Festive!, originally a promotional tie-in with the B.F. Goodrich tire company.  This LP features ten tracks from an assortment of artists on the A&M label, most of which have never appeared on other albums (either unique songs, or unique versions of songs).

The Tijuana Brass bookends the album with “Winter Wonderland” (with the vocal introduction edited off), and “Jingle Bell Rock” (which features bells in place of the marimba figure at the beginning of the song).  Brasil ’66 gives us “The Christmas Song (Chestnuts…),” a non-album track for them.  Liza Minnelli’s “Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy”, the Baja Marimba Band’s “Partridge In A Pear Tree” and We Five’s “My Favorite Things” all hail from previou A&M album releases.  Side two opens with the rare Burt Bacharach track “The Bell That Couldn’t Jingle,” followed by the non-album Pete Jolly track, “It’s The Most Wonderful Time”, Claudine Longet’s “Snow” and the non-album “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” cover by the Baja Marimba Band.

It’s a shame A&M never reissued this on CD, as there are several more classic A&M tracks that could be added to fill it out.   Wes Montgomery recorded “Greensleeves” on one of his CTi albums, as did Kai Winding and J.J. Johnson with “The Little Drummer Boy” on their album Betwixt & Between.  Both of the early 70s Carpenters single tracks “Merry Christmas Darling” and “Santa Claus Is Coming To Town” fit on here also, as does the Shawn Phillips “A Christmas Song.”  Claudine Longet recorded another Christmas song as well:  “I Don’t Intend To Spend Christmas Without You,” and they could have grabbed the Baja Marimba Band version of “Las Mananitas” from their For Animals Only album (as the same track appears on the Tijuana Brass Christmas album).

This wasn’t the most popular album, yet it appears to be easy enough to find online for sale.  If you fancy that A&M family sound, this album will fit the bill.  It usually gets an annual spin here at Casa Rudy, either in LP form or in my own expanded CD version.

A Merry Henry Mancini Christmas [Christmas Album Countdown]

Greatest Christmas SongsAt the holidays, we often look back to our childhood fondly for favorite things we enjoyed back in those simpler years.  I have my share of memories, including a handful of holiday albums that even today, get at least one spin during the busy holiday season.  One of those I spin is A Merry Mancini Christmas.  Thankfully, RCA has chosen to commit that album to CD, but has also released an enhanced version (featuring a new transfer from the 3-track masters) called Greatest Christmas Songs.  The running order has changed, and a few tracks have been added, but the music remains the same.  (It’s nothing a programmable CD player can’t fix!)  One of those extra tracks is the lush and jazzy “Snowfall” which hails from the Mancini Touch LP from the late 50s.  The music is what you’d expect from mid 60s’ Mancini:  a few medleys of popular upbeat Christmas songs strung together on one side in more of a jazzy pop-standards vocal configuration, and the quiet and more reflective songs with strings on the flip side.  The vocalists, incidentally, include Mancini’s wife Ginny, who was an in-demand singer herself back in the day.  One true highlight is the Mancini-penned “Carol For Another Christmas” which opened the second side of the original LP.  Well worth seeking out if you’re a fan of Mancini’s!