Dec 24, 2023

Our Favorite Christmas Recordings (CD Reviews)

One of the most delightful dimensions of Christmas is the music that attends the season. From the most devotional church music to familiar carols to popular Christmas songs, music fills the air at this time of the year. At this most wonderful time of the year, we at Classical Candor thought it might be fun to share a few of our favorite Christmas recordings. 

 

Karl Nehring’s Christmas Favorites:

 

Essential Carols: The Very Best of King’s College Choir, Cambridge. (CD1) Hark! the Herald Angels SingThe First NowellWhile Shepherds WatchedI Saw Three Ships; Ding Dong! Merrily on High; King Jesus Has a GardenIn Dulci JubiloUnto Us Is Born a SonO Come, All Ye FaithfulAway in a MangerO Little Town of BethlehemThe Holly and the IvyGod Rest Ye Merry, GentlemenSee Amid the Winter's SnowPast Three O' ClockInvitatoryAdam Lay YboundenGabriel's Message; (CD2) Once in Royal David's CitySussex CarolRockingRejoice and Be MerryThe Cherry Tree CarolThe Three KingsAs with Gladness Men of OldA Great and Mighty WonderThe Infant King;BalulalowThe Crown of RosesChrist Was Born on Christmas DayBlessed Be That Maid MaryLute-Book LullabyMyn LykingPersonent HodieIn the Bleak Mid-WinterCoventry CarolShepherds in the Field AbidingTorchesFantasia on Christmas Carols. Simon Preston, Andrew Davis. organ; The Choir of King’s College; David Willcocks, conductor. Decca B0005302-02. This is the straight stuff, traditional carols sung by a young British choir in a beautiful chapel. As you listen, you can almost close your eyes and imagine yourself at a Christmas Eve candlelight service. 

 

A Mormon Tabernacle Choir ChristmasJoy to the WorldCarol of the BellsI Wonder As I WanderWhence Is That Goodly Fragrance?Masters in This HallThe First NoelHow Far Is It to Bethlehem?Pat-A-PanWhat Shall We Give to the Babe in the Manger?One December Bright and ClearFantasy on 'What Child Is This?Hark! the Herald Angels SingJesus, Jesus, Rest Your HeadAngels from the Realms of GlorySilent Night. Mormon Tabernacle Choir; Orchestra at Temple Square; Craig Jessop, conductor. Telarc DSD CD-80552. From this side of the pond, another world-class choir serves up a program of traditional Christmas music. Here we have the 350-voice strong Mormon Tabernacle Choir (now known as The Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square) with orchestral accompaniment recorded in glorious sound quality by the engineering team at Telarc. Hard to find but worth the search.

 

Christmas RhapsodyO Come All Ye Faithful / Angels We Have Heard on High / Hark! The Herald Angels SingI'll Be Home for Christmas / "Going Home" (New World Symphony)Santa Claus Is Coming to Town / Dance of the Sugar Plum FairyThe Christmas SongRudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer / Let It Snow; Ave MariaO Come O Come Emanuel / O Little Town of Bethlehem / The First Noel; Winter Wonderland / Jingle BellsSilent Night / O Holy NightSweet Little Jesus Boy / Away in a Manger / What Child Is This?Jesu Joy of Man’s Desiring / Amazing GraceHave Yourself a Merry Little ChristmasWhite Christmas. John Bayless, piano. Koch KOC-CD-9610. This is an album that brings a joyous, upbeat holiday spirit into your home. The medleys include carols along with more popular music associated with the holidays. I still remember receiving the CD for review years ago and thinking I was going to hate it – I thought it was going to be superficial, lightweight, New Age fluff. I played it only out of a sense of duty and was delighted – and have played it every year since. It’s a keeper.

 

Joyous Day! Songs of Christmas Arranged by Barlow BradfordAngels We Have Heard on HighInfant Holy, Infant LowlySussex CarolStill, Still, StillI Wonder As I WanderPat-a-PanStar CandlesJesus, Jesus Rest Your HeadBring a Torch, Jeanette, Isabella; Suo GanCarol of the BellsSilent Night. Utah Chamber Artists; Barlow Bradford, artistic director. Clarion CLR928CD. Familiar Christmas music from an unfamiliar ensemble, but my goodness, in many ways this deftly arranged and expertly recorded release is the most fully satisfying Christmas recording I have ever heard. Perhaps it is because of the smaller forces involved, but somehow the balance of sound seems just right, perfectly appropriate for the music. Whatever the reason, this CD is a hidden gem of a Christmas recording!

 

Ki ho’alu Christmas: Hawaiian Slack Key GuitarDo You Hear What I Hear?C-H-R-I-S-T-M-A-S (The Meaning of Christmas)Christmas Carol WaltzMele KalikimakaAway in a MangerWinter WonderlandChristmas MemoriesIt Came Upon a Midnight ClearLittle Drummer BoyFireside Ki ho’aluMedley: Kanaka Waiwai / Jesu Mo Ke Kahuhipa; Po La’i E (Silent Night)Silent Night. Keola Beamer, guitars; Ledward Kaapana, guitar, autoharp; Moses Kahumoku, guitar; Cyril Pahinui, 12-string guitar. voice; James “Bla” Pahinui, guitar; Barney Isaacs, acoustic steel guitar; George Kuo, guitar; Rev. Dennis Kamakahi, 12-string guitar, voice; Ozzie Kotani, guitar; George Kahumoku, 12-string guitar; Cindy Combs, guitar; Joanie Komatsu, guitar, voice; Ruth Komatsu, recorder. Dancing Cat Records 090222-38037-2. For those unfamiliar with slack key guitar, here is a quick explanation courtesy of the good folks at Wikipedia: “slack-key guitar (from Hawaiian kī hōʻalu, which means "loosen the [tuning] key") is a fingerstyle genre of guitar music that originated in Hawaii. Nearly all slack key requires retuning the guitar strings from standard (EADGBE), and this usually (but not always) means lowering or "slacking" several strings. The result will most often be an open major chord, although it can also be a major-seventh chord, a sixth, or (rarely) a minor.” Hearing this Christmas music played in these unusual tunings is an ear- and mind-opening experience that will bring a smile to all but the most hidebound mainlander. (To be perfectly honest, though, my very favorite CD in this style is Slack Key Christmas on the Windham Hill label, but sadly enough, it is now out of print and difficult to track down.)

 

We Three Kings - The Roches. Break Forth O Beauteous Heavenly LightFor Unto Us A Child Is BornAngels We Have Heard On HighDeck The HallsChristmas Passing ThroughSleigh RideAway in a MangerHere We Come a CarollingThe Little Drummer BoyThe Holly & The IvyFrosty The SnowmanDo You Hear What I Hear?; We Three KingsStar Of WonderWinter WonderlandJoy To The WorldO Little Town Of BethlehemGood King WenceslasJingle BellsThe First NoelGod Rest Ye Merry GentlemenIt Came Upon A Midnight ClearAdeste FidelesSilver Bells. Maggie Roche, vocals, keyboards; Terre Roche, vocals, guitars, piano; Suzzy Roche, vocals, guitars, keyboards; Vince Cherico, drums and drum programming, percussion; Paul Ossola, bass guitar, upright bass; Victor Lesser, Saxophones. MCA Records / Paradox Records MCAD -10020. This is one of those albums that you will either love or hate. Or you might love it on Monday, hate it on Tuesday, put it away for a few days, but on the Saturday before Christmas, pull it out and love it again. The three sisters harmonize, weave in and out in counterpoint, have some fun, but also show reverence when reverence is called for. Quirky? Yes. But full of the spirit of Christmas. It will make you smile and enjoy the holiday season.

A Charlie Brown Christmas
 (Deluxe Edition). TannenbaumWhat Child Is ThisMy Little DrumLinus & LucyChristmas Time Is Here (Instrumental)Christmas Time Is Here (Vocal)SkatingHark, The Herald Angels SingChristmas Is ComingFür EliseThe Christmas SongTannenbaum (Take 2/recorded September 21, 1965);Tannenbaum (Take 3/recorded September 21, 1965)Greensleeves (Take 6/recorded October 28, 1965)Linus And Lucy (Take 1/recorded September 17, 1965)Christmas Time Is Here (Take 1/recorded September 17, 1965);Christmas Time Is Here (Vocal) (Rehearsal/recording Date Unknown)Christmas Time Is Here (Take 4/recording Date Unknown)Skating (Take 1/recorded September 22, 1965)Jingle Bells (Takes 1-4/recorded September 21, 1965)Christmas Is Coming (Take 3/recorded September 17, 1965)Christmas Is Coming (Take 3/recorded September 21, 1965)Für Elise (Takes 1-2/recording Date Unknown)The Christmas Song (Take 8/recorded October 28, 1965). Ince Guaraldi Trio. Craft Recordings. 
This is the latest incarnation of a true Christmas classic. According to the Craft website,” this deluxe CD release of A Charlie Brown Christmas features a brand-new Stereo Mix of the classic album remastered from the original three-track and two-track sources, as well as thirteen unreleased outtakes, highlights taken from five sessions of recording material. Amazing in their own right these unheard versions give insight into how this iconic score took shape. The package also features new liner notes from Peanuts historian, Derrick Bang.” For many homes, including mine, Christmas is just not Christmas without frequent playing of this soundtrack, a true Christmas classic.


Bill Heck's Christmas Favorites

What would the holiday season be without Tchaikovsky’s Nutcracker ballet? Surely even Ebenezer Scrooge had a soft spot for this lovely, imaginative music and, at least for many of us if not for poor Ebeneezer, the warm memories that it can evoke.

Antal Dorati/London Symphony Orchestra. Mercury Living Presence 475 6623. If we can say that any recording of the complete ballet is the “standard”, this might be it. It is well-played, with tempos that are mostly quick but rarely rushed. The recording, one of the Mercury Living Presence series, is superb for its time and still holds up well. Some may with for a little more atmosphere, both artistically and sonically, but you can hardly go wrong with this as your baseline for how the Nutcracker should be done. 


Seiji Ozawa/Boston Symphony Orchestra. DG 00289 477 5153. Another fine option for the complete ballet, and it’s packaged with Swan Lake and The Sleeping Beauty in the multi-CD set. This performance seems to have a little more of that aforementioned “atmosphere”, with slightly freer tempi and slightly more sonic clarity to bring out all the marvelous inner parts. I really must give special mention to the Waltz of the Flowers, which is simply stunning; how can one not want to dance along? 

 

Stewart Goodyear (piano arrangement) Steinway STNS 30040. Goodyear’s is not the only piano arrangement of the ballet out there, but is arguably the best, and the arranger plays it well indeed. If, when hearing this, you did not know that it was a transcription of an orchestral piece, you might easily assume that it was originally written for the keyboard. It’s a given that the Steinway engineers do a good job of capturing the sound of – yes – a Steinway.

 

LA Guitar Quartet: Nutcracker Suite Delos DE 3132. Not the complete ballet, of course, but it’s amazing how well Tchaikovsky’s music can be adapted beyond its original orchestral context. Four guitars allow real exploration of the harmonies that were in the orchestral version, but with completely different balances, each line winding its way through a unified whole. The playing is first rate, as is the Delos audiophile-grade sound.


Nutcracker Suite as arranged by Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn; played by the Harmonie Ensemble of New York, conducted by Steve Richmond. Harmonia Mundi HMU 907493. Seventeen tracks of syncopated enjoyment. Ellington and Strayhorn work their magic in (re)arranging the originals into a jazzy suite, here played by an excellent big band. (Alas, it appears that the Harmonie Ensemble is now defunct.) Just the thing to cap the holidays and send us off in rousing style!



Bryan Geyer's Christmas Favorites

I'm unable to pick any particular recording, but these two modern era Christmas songs have always seemed more significant than the rest: 

"The Christmas Song" became a Nat King Cole classic and any of his various recordings would be appropriate.
"Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" was subject to excessive revision, generally applied to "jolly up" the basic WWII thematic setting. I personally prefer the original, or versions close to it—maybe because I clearly remember those WWII days—but it's catchy stuff regardless of the score.

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