Sunday, December 23, 2012

2 Days of Xmas: The Beach Boys - "The Beach Boys Christmas Album" (1964)

The Beach Boys - "The Beach Boys' Christmas Album" (1964) - Capitol Records

Hello Friends,

Surf's up tonight at the Christmas party tiki bar and we got another classic on the ol' Holiday turntable!

"Oh... I hope its the 'Get A Life' DVD box set!'
(Gil Elvgren)
Clocking in at just 27 minutes, The Beach Boys Christmas Album is must for every holiday record listening party!  Along with Elvis's & Phil Spector's, its one of the few bona fide rock & roll Christmas LPs.

Side One contains five (!) original tunes which have now pretty much become holiday standards: "Little Saint Nick", "The Man With All The Toys", "Santa's Beard", "Merry Christmas, Baby" & "Christmas Day."  The rest of the album is rounded out with more traditional standards with the familiar Beach Boys harmonies and Brian Wilson arrangements!

Christmas Day by The Beach Boys on Grooveshark

FUN FACT: Hey Kids, the song "Christmas Day" is the first Beach Boys song to feature founding member, Al Jardine on lead vocals!

RATING:  5 Auld Lang Synes out of 5

Saturday, December 22, 2012

3 Days of Xmas: Ray Conniff - "Christmas With Conniff" (1959)


The Ray Conniff Singers - "Christmas with Conniff" (1959) - Columbia Records

Hello Friends,

We're keeping things light tonight on Vinyl in the Valley.  Tiki T. is busy wrapping presents and trying to perfect her Wassail recipe.  I'm getting a little sloshed, spinning some records and trying to pretend I don't smell the apples burning!

This is the first (and best) of Ray Conniff's four Christmas albums.  Jolly Old Ray leads small army of vocalists in a fun, secular and largely nostalgic album of familiar holiday hits.

"Pinup & Reindeer"
(Alberto Vargas)
Follow the bouncing ball, kids!

Its Space Age Pop for the swingin' supermarket crowd.  I can picture my grandparents listening to this record while decorating their newly purchased artificial tree and getting drunk off high balls!

By the way friends, does anybody decorate their tree on Christmas Eve anymore?

Anyways there's songs here like "Frosty", "Rudolph", "Here Comes Santa Claus", "Greensleeves"  & "Silver Bells".   But the undisputed winner on this record is the little known, melancholy gem, "The Christmas Bride".





RATING: 4.5 Red Schnozollas out of 5

Friday, December 21, 2012

4 Days of Xmas: The Kingston Trio - "The Last Month of the Year" (1960)

"Hey... get your finger outta my ear!"

The Kingston Trio - "The Last Month of the Year" (1960) - Capitol Records

Hello Friends,

Things are gettin' folksy tonight!

Formed in 1957, The Kingston Trio became a top-selling act and helped pave the way for the folk revival movement of the late 1950's/early 1960's.  In their records of this era you can usually hear the influence they would have over artists like Bob Dylan, Simon & Garfunkel, Joan Baez, the Byrds, The Muppets, et cetera.


"I got your milk and cookies right here!"
There's some great harmonies and some fine instrumentation here but when we listen to this record we feel like we're at some college frat party back in 1960 and some beatniky-looking dude in a turtleneck just brought us some reefer.

Still, its certainly not a bad album.  The song selections range from  Old English Carols to African-American Spirituals.   A must for the NPR crowd! Its also probably the best Christmas album to feature the bouzouki as a prominent instrument! 

The title (and closing) song, "The Last Month of the Year" is good, but the version by the Staple Singers is vastly better!

RATING: 3.5 Sommerset Gloucestershire Wassail's out of 5   

Thursday, December 20, 2012

5 Days of Xmas: Ferrante & Teicher - "Snowbound" (1962)

Ferrante & Teicher - "Snowbound" (1962) - United Artists

Hello Friends,

We're ready for a blizzard tonight on Vinyl in the Valley.  Outside the snow is piling up and we're inside getting toasty and listening to the perfect soundtrack record for a cold winter's eve! 
"She makes my bell ding-a-ling!"
(E. Simms Campbell)

This mostly instrumental album is loungey & hypnotic and would be great to put on when your Jewish friends come over because its more of a "Winter" record, rather than a Christmas record.  Lots of songs about sleighrides and snowmen and moonlight and not a mention of Jesus, elves, wise men or Ol' Saint Nick.  Shalom!  

The dueling pianists are in fine form backed by an orchestra and chorus conducted by Nick Perito.  Not as experimental, or as space-age, as some of their 1950's recordings, but a great addition to any vinyl collection.

Would probably sound right at home on one of those one-piece console stereos that looked like a piece of furniture that families gathered around in the early 1960's!





RATING: 4 snow drifts out of 5


Wednesday, December 19, 2012

6 Days of Xmas: "Christmas Music of France" (1967)


Jean Paul-Kreder Choir & Les Petits Chanteurs A La Croix de Bois - "Christmas Music of France" - 1967 - Capitol Records

Bonjour Friends,

"This one has your name on it!"
(Bunny Yeager)
A little disappointed here.  We were hoping for a record full of bustling Parisian street music with lots of accordions,  jazzy, nightclub ballads and general yuletide debauchery.  I went to whip up some French 75's while Tiki T. went to slip on something more "comfortable"!  

Cue the Can-Can girls!

We put on the record and instead of some swinging, sleazy album of Christmas tunes sung in French, we got a very tame, unsexy album of French choral music.  In an instant, our romantic corner of the tiki transformed into a Medieval French Cathedral!

Cancel the Can-Can girls!

Don't worry friends, we made the best of it!  We lit some candles, drank some strong red wine and enjoyed a quiet, reverential night.  Plus, for some reason, Tiki T. knew all the words (in French) to "Il Est Ne Le Divin Enfant" which kind of turned me on!

Oui! Oui!

RATING: 3.5 Petit Papa Noels out of 5

     

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

7 Days of Xmas: "Something Festive" (1968)

Various Artists - "Something Festive" (1968) - A & M Records

Hello Friends,

Thinking about inviting the cute neighbor girl over for a little pre-Holiday cocktail?  Sounds good to us!  Its the Holidays, after all!  


"Lucky snowman"
(Bettie Page)
Get those lights on the tree working, open up that bottle of Red you've been saving and to "seal the deal" drop the needle on this 1968 compilation album put out by Herb Alpert & A&M Records.

Ten tracks from A&M artists, including some sublime easy listening Latin Jazz with Herb Alpert and TJB ("Winter Wonderland", "Jingle Bell Rock"), Sergio Mendes and Brasil 66 ("The Christmas Song") and the Baja Marimba band ("Partridge in a Pear Tree", "God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen").  

There's also Burt Bacharach ("The Bell That Couldn't Jingle"), We Five ("My Favorite Things"), Pete Jolly ("Its the Most Wonderful Time of the Year"), a manic-sounding Liza Minnelli ("Raggedy Ann and Raggedy Andy") and the hot French gun-enthusiast/husband killer, Claudine Longet ("Snow").

Snow by Claudine Longet on Grooveshark

Something Festive, indeed!

RATING: 4 Bells That Couldn't Jingle out of 5



Monday, December 17, 2012

8 Days of Xmas: The Three Suns - "A Ding Dong Dandy Christmas" (1959)

The Three Suns - "A Ding Dong Dandy Christmas" (1959) - RCA Victor

Hello Friends,

Fill that collins glass to the tippy top and grab some tinsel because we're Ding Dong Dandy'ing 'til the wee hours with The Three Suns.  From the awesome cover art to the music contained in the grooves, this is an outstanding Christmas LP.  Perfect for a festive and space age tiki party on the moon!

In addition to the usual organ, accordion & guitar interplay, the Suns also employ some swinging drums, some bells, chimes, an oboe and two (count 'em) tubas!


First Lady Mamie Eisenhower: The Early Years
(Gil Elvren)
White Christmas by The Three Suns on Grooveshark

Every track is awesome and it sounds like no other Christmas LP we've ever heard!  Plus, check out that cover!  Looks like some holiday cheer is about to spread!  

FUN FACTS: Hey kids, did you know that The Three Suns were the favorite band of First Lady Mamie Eisenhower!  

RATING: 5 Ding Dong Dandys out of 5

Sunday, December 16, 2012

9 Days of Xmas: Arthur Fiedler & the Boston Pops - "Pops Christmas Party" (1959)

Arthur Fielder & the Boston Pops - "Pops Christmas Party" (1959) - RCA

Hello Friends,

Pahk you ahse up at the tiki bah fahr another egg nawg 'cuz we got the bawstan pawps ahn!  Don't make me cahm ova there!

"Holy Holidays Batman.. Something just popped up!"
(Yvonne Craig)
Arthah Fiedlah condahcted the pawps for like 50 yeahs.  Released in 1959, Christmas Pawps Pahty is the first of several Pawps LPs dedicated to pahrennial hawliday favorites.  The music is fahmiliar, done up and ahranged in a lite-classical, pawps style.   Its the perfect pahty album if yaah tryin' to keep things clahssy!

Its bahmbastic in ahl the right pahts, especially on their now pretty famous take on the Leroy Andersawn's "Sleigh Ride".  Nawt only that, but its the quietah moments that really stand out... like Alfred Krips' violin solo on "White Christmas" or the nine minute, "Dream Pantomime" from Humperdinck's Hansal & Gretel.   Now thaht's some sublime cahnducting if you ahsk me!

Nawt to mention the sauhcey brunette ahn the covah!    Man, I'd invite her to my pawps pahty any day! How'dya like dem apples? 

Go Sawx!

RATING: 5 Arthur Fiedler mustaches out of 5

Saturday, December 15, 2012

10 Days of Xmas: Henry Mancini - "A Merry Mancini Christmas" (1966)

Henry Mancini and his Orchestra & Chorus - "A Merry Mancini Christmas" (1966) - RCA


Hello Friends,


"Nice Wreath"
(Gil Elvgren)
We had high hopes for this Henry Mancini mid-60's Christmas LP.   Tiki T. and I were hoping to be transported back in time to a swingin' bachelor pad with lots of red xmas lights, fancy cocktails and stategically-placed mistletoe; instead we were transported to a modern day shopping mall with gaudy decorations, a tinny sound-system and long lines at the Old Navy store!

Very middle of the road LP here!  Sounds like a million other easy-listening holiday-themed records.   There's some decent big band arrangements of all the holiday favorites, backed by a rather pedestrian chorus.  Being Mancini we were hoping for something a little bit jazzier, more Latin-sounding, more experimental.  Its not terrible by any stretch, just very standard!  

One standout track kicks off Side Two and that's the Mancini-penned, "Carol for Another Christmas".  This was the theme music Mancini wrote for a Rod Serling-scripted teleplay of the same name.  It only aired on television once (December 28, 1964) and starred Peter Sellers, Sterling Hayden, Ben Gazzara, Britt Ekland, Eva Marie Saint and others.  Produced by the Xerox Corporation, it was a 90 minute sci-fi update of Dicken's "A Christmas Carol" meant to  promote the United Nations.  Most of us have never seen it, but those who have say its a terrifying Cold War allegory told in the dark & twisted style of "The Twilight Zone".  FESTIVE!

RATING: 3 Carols for Another Christmas out of 5