
Christmas, By: Michael Bublé

Glee: The Christmas Album, Volume 2
Christmas
By: Michael Bublé
The crooner’s sex appeal isn’t just surface hotness, though no one’s going to
fault his boyish features. It’s all over "Santa Baby," taking the
typically-for-chicks tune and adding some machismo to it – baby becomes
"bubby." And instead of a sable, he wants a manly watch. With his deep drawl,
and his tongue firmly placed in his cheek (don’t get any ideas about getting
your bells jingled), the time-traveling troubadour pulls off the Eartha Kitt
classic most charmingly. Then again, he does justice to most of the classics –
14 of them, and a new one called "Cold December Night" – on his first
full-length Christmas album, a project the Frank Sinatra-meets-Dean Martin
singer was made for. It’s why songs like "Holly Jolly Christmas" and "It’s
Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas," both beautifully orchestrated by
schmaltz master David Foster, fit his classic-sounding voice like hand and glove.
To play up his old-soul appeal, he invites the Puppini Sisters for a very merry
’60s-styled swing on "Jingle Bells." He stretches his chords on a divine "Ave
Maria," has a "White Christmas" with Shania Twain and does a lovely,
for-the-fireside version of "I’ll Be Home for Christmas." Most surprising is
his poignant change-up of Mariah Carey’s "All I Want for Christmas is You,"
pulling back on the pep and zeroing in on the lonely lyrics of desperation for
a lover who’s away during the holidays. But not Bublé. He sounds right at home
for Christmas.
Glee: The Christmas Album, Volume 2
Not to be a Grinch, but is more Glee
music really at the top of anyone’s Christmas list? But here you have it
anyway: 12 tracks from a TV show so in love with itself that every few months
we must be reminded of how awesome they think they are. The McKinley High kids
are best when they’re not being themselves – you know, gleeful. A standout on
the second disc of Christmas songs from the glee club is, predictably, Rachel’s
(aka Lea Michele) appropriately gloomy reading of Joni Mitchell’s "River," just
her peerless voice and a piano. Moments of minimalism trump all else: "Let It
Snow" is a charming duet between Chris Colfer’s Kurt and Darren Criss’ Blaine,
with ad-libs, finger snaps and a similar whimsy to "Baby, It’s Cold Outside"
from the first set. But the strongest of all the songs doesn’t even belong to a
New Directions gleek. Instead, that honor goes to Glee Project
runners-up Lindsay Pearce and Alex Newell, who sing "Do You Hear What I Hear?"
like they’re trying to win their way in (this stirring tour de force should do
it). The rest? As tacky as those Christmas sweaters grandma knits.
"Extraordinary Merry Christmas" isn’t extra ordinary; it’s Christmas-through-Katy
Perry trash. Same goes for "Do They Know It’s Christmas," originally a 1984
charity song that just sounds hokier in their hands, and the ’80s romp
"Christmas Wrapping" is completely lacking in melody. And they wonder why Sue
Sylvester hates them.
Also Out
Ultimate Christmas
By: Dave Koz
‘Tis the season for the saxophone. Dave
Koz’s fourth Christmas album is essentially a cash-grab compilation gleaning
tracks from his three previous holiday albums – December Makes Me Feel This
Way, A Smooth Jazz Christmas and Memories of a Winter’s Night
– that tacks on two newbies: an intro and an outro (woopty doo!). Definitely
not for people who get enough of this on the elevator, this smooth-jazz
collection still offers some nice twists in composition, taking "Please Come
Home For Christmas" into a bluesy direction with Idol finalist Kimberly
Locke’s singing. But it’s a package that, despite tradition, needs some shaking
up.
A Very She &
Him Christmas
By: She & Him
She & Him make this Christmas their own
with carols that aren’t cookie-cutter, taking gentler approaches to the
same-old. Part of why it works without sounding monotonous is Zooey Deschanel’s
darling, no-frills voice, a force that pulls you in with just the first few
notes of "The Christmas Waltz," tiptoeing in softly with guitar and a beautiful
lilt that’s delicately matched. More standard fare is just as solid: the
intimacy on "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" captures the song’s
nostalgia and "Silver Bells" is performed prettily just with a ukulele. A
Very She & Him Christmas is a very nice surprise – even for the
hipsters who hate Christmas music.
A Holiday Carole
By: Carole King
The legend shows her age on her first studio
album in 10 years, disappointedly without a single new tune from the
songwriting prodigy. Even her voice, ironed flat throughout, is a let down. "My
Favorite Things" tries to recapture King’s piano-pop work but comes off as a
note-flubbed hack job. The over-enunciated ding-dongs on "Carol of the Bells"
do it a disservice, though the choir helps conceal King’s weathered voice.
Laughably awful, "Sleigh Ride" sounds more suited for an episode of Mister
Rogers. Not until the coda, "New Year’s Day," is there a truly memorable
song that isn’t upset by a completely off-key vocal. A Holiday Carole,
unfortunately, is the coal of Christmas.