Wednesday, December 24, 2014

My Top 40 Christmas Tunes- 10-1 !

With Christmas here, it is time to unwrap the Top 10 songs from last year's Facebook updates I did last year- Enjoy - Please forgive some of the YouTube links which may have gone bad in the past year...

Two of my favorite things are Music Countdowns and Christmas!

...And now- the Top 10!


10. Christmas Eve / Sarajevo 12/24, Trans-Siberian Orchestra
Inspired by an elderly cello player in war torn Bosnia- this song features two classics in one- the Reese's Peanut Butter Cup of Christmas tunes. Listen for both the Carol of the Bells and God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen featured against an orchestra, hard rock guitars... and a single cello 

9. Happy Xmas (War Is Over), John & Yoko / The Plastic Ono Band
A protest song disguised as a Christmas song! This song has been covered many times, and quite frankly, all the covers suck... because they do not get the protest song angle- any way here it is... Ironically, Number 9... Number 9... Number 9...

8. Wonderful Christmastime, Paul McCartney
It is estimated that Sir Paul makes $400,000 per year on royalties for this song. Some love it, a lot hate it. I will tell you this- Christmas time doesn't start in my mind until I hear this for the first time each November.
This is the video that explains the deeper meaning of this song. Well, not really: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V9BZDpni56Y

7. Same Old Lang Syne, Dan Fogelberg
Believe it or not, this song is based on a true story. One thing not true- She didn't marry an architect- She married a Gym Teacher...Anyway, Jill kept this story secret to preserve Dan's marriage. Although this song was not originally considered a Christmas song, it has since evolved into one. For me I always loved the song- Even before high school I loved the lyric: "Just for a minute we were back in school... and felt the old familiar pain"

6. Last Christmas, Wham
I never liked this song. Until one summer, at a Japanese Karaoke bar, my good buddy Tomoda-san stepped up to the mike and rocked it out. I never loved this song. Until two years ago in Germany, when visiting a Christmas Market, a street organ walked by, and out came -not Stille Nacht, not Oh Tannenbaum,- but this song. Is it Cheesy? Let me put it this way -Barry Mannilow's team sued George Michael for plagiarizing "Can't Smile WithoutYou" - And forced a settlement! As part of the settlement ,for one year, all of the proceeds from this song went to Ethiopian Famine Relief. Here is the biggest selling song in UK History to not hit number 1... Tell me you don't smile when you hear it the first time each Fall...

5. Christmas is Coming, The Payolas
This Vancouver band ran into airplay issues in the US- primarily because no US radio station really wanted to play songs associated with the word "payola". I discovered this tune when hunting around the WRSU record library for Christmas songs. The contrast of the upbeat modern rock track vs. holiday angst lyrics make this song surprisingly refreshing. It took me about 10 years to find it on CD, and I haven't stopped listening to it since then.

4. All I Want For Christmas Is You, Mariah Carey
The most surprising thing bout this countdown? This song... For an artist that I really don't enjoy at all, this song is awesome. I always credited that to her picking a good song to cover, until I found out this was an original composition! Brilliant song, Brilliant recording. Great stuff...
and the mandatory dog parody: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HZCRyI8eZec
one last one: jimmy fallon, the roots, and mariah- with school toys.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sWEfszb9h8Q

3. Christmas (Baby Please Come Home), U2
The original version by Darlene Love was selected by Rolling Stone as the Greatest Rock and Roll Christmas Song in 2010- and was cited for its "raw emotion and sheer power". I heard this cover version first- and thought the same of Joshua Tree era Bono's voice... Power and emotion, along with a kick ass drum intro. As for Darlene Love? She is singing background vocals on this version too!

2. Christmas is the time to say 'I Love You', Billy Squier
As far as I know this the only song on the countdown featured on Rock Band. As the 'B' Side to 'My Kind of Lover', this song hit it big in 1981- and in my mind kicked off the Renaissance of Rock Christmas songs that started in the 80s and is pretty much overplayed now... For the record- if you do not like this song, you do not like Christmas, and you do not like music. End of story! By the way--- Darlene Love, the original performer of yesterday's song number 3 song, covered this song!
Yo, MTV Rocks... Check out this sweater! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QPf2snTB2wo

1 . Do They Know It's Christmas, Band Aid
"This record was recorded on the 25th of November 1984. It's now 8 AM in the morning of the 26th. We've been here 24 hours and I think it's time we went home. So from me - Bob Geldof, and Midge, we'd say, 'Good morning to you all, and a million thanks to everyone on the record. Have a lovely Christmas. Bye.'"



Sunday, December 21, 2014

My Top 40 Christmas Tunes- 20-11...

    With the Christmas season underway, I thought I'd bring pack a series of Facebook updates I did last year- Enjoy - Please forgive some of the YouTube links which may have gone bad in the past year...

    Two of my favorite things are Music Countdowns and Christmas!

    ...And now- the penultimate part of the countdown...

    20. Jingle Bell Rock, Hall and Oates...

    This classic was originally made famous by Bobby Helms. This is a very faithful cover that just sounds right with these guys doing it. Part of the charm is the video. Check it out if you have 3 minutes.


    19. Father Christmas, The Kinks...
    As far as I know, this was the first angry Christmas song. A true classic


    18. Rudolph The Red Nosed Reindeer, The Smithereens...
    You want Rock and Roll? How about New Jersey's own Smithereens- During the 1980's you could always find them playing a club in New Jersey... Here is retro-pop-bluesy version of yet another Christmas classic... Great bass line and vocals. Wonderful job taking a song, and making it their own!


    17. Deck the Halls, Manheim Steamroller

    My first favorite bands as a kid were bands that were handed down by my brothers and sisters: The Beatles, Chicago, Bread (don't ask)... My first favorite band, that I "found" was the Alan Parsons Project. At first glance, they were one of many Art/Progressive bands that dominated FM airplay in the late 70s, but in reality, they were storyteller rock. Each of their albums had a theme. Also, every one of their albums always had an instru...mental based on a repetitive melody, synthesizers in the lead backed with an orchestra, along with a driving drum beat. What does this have to do with today's song? Nothing. Except if the Alan Parsons Project ever did a Christmas theme album, this would be the instrumental.

    16. Santa Claus is Comin' to Town, Bruce Springsteen...

    Bruuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuce!

    15. Christmas Wrapping, The Waitresses...

    Monica's favorite Christmas song... and so much better than their other hit, "I know What Boys Like". Akron, Ohio's most famous post punk, new wave, band:

    Not my house, but a cool video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hyEztz6nY9Q

    14. Step Into Christmas, Elton John

    There was a time when pop Christmas tunes were a rarity. Back in the 70s- It seemed like there was this song, and of course John Lennon's song. Recorded in the same era as Elton's masterpiece Goodbye Yellow Brick Road (Title Track, Candle in the Wind, Harmony, Funeral For a Friend, Benny & the Jets, and Saturday Nights Alright For Fighting), this song foreshadows Elton's mid 80's pop tendencies, with the Phil Spectoresque "Wall of Sound..." presaging Philadelphia Freedom's Philly soul sound.

    Video (Even sounds like it was recorded off an AM radio!) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tSJMSnj6UUM

    13. Christmas Time ...Again, Extreme

    What do you do if you are a hard rock band, whose only hits to date are mellow acoustic tunes featuring vocal harmonies? You get yourself a spot on "A Very Special Christmas II" and do a mellow acoustic tune featuring vocal harmonies. It didn't really work out for the band, but lead singer Gary Cherone used it as a launch pad to become the trivia answer to "Who was the third most famous lead singer Van Halen hired?".

    Play Karaoke Christmas with Extreme! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OEdwLRviJzw

    12. Please Come Home For Christmas, The Eagles...

    It may be a remake of the 1960 Charles "Don't Call me Charlie" Brown original, but it charted 58 places higher on the Billboard Hot 100 when released as a single in 1978 and peaking at number 18. Released after Hotel California but before the Long Run, this is probably the unlikeliest of the many hit songs by the Eagles.


    11. Christmas All Over Again, Tom Petty...

    Whenever two of the Traveling Wilbury's get together, you know magic will happen... Jeff Lynne's production makes this my all time favorite Tom Petty song. This song has the distinguished honor of being used in three of the worst Christmas movies of all time: Home Alone 2: Lost in New York, Jingle All The Way, and four Christmases (which may or may not be bad, but is guilty by association).


    Live version- without the Tom Petty wish list ending  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gaPj1GoDpQw

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

My Top 40 Christmas Tunes- 30-21...

With the Christmas season underway, I thought I'd bring pack a series of Facebook updates I did last year- Enjoy - Please forgive some of the YouTube links which may have gone bad in the past year...

Two of my favorite things are Music Countdowns and Christmas!


This entryups the ante as we get deeper into tho countdown...


30. Christmas Time, Bryan Adams 

As we enter the top 30, we start off with the first appearance of the "Anthem / Power Chorus" type Christmas song that became prevalent as 80's stars did "original" Christmas Carols. This my favorite song by the Canadian John Cougar- For some reason he just never appealed to me. Good Christmas song though!
 Another faux video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHMyZXV5ajk

29. The Chipmunk Song (Christmas Don't Be Late), The Chipmunks
Tell me who has resisted singing along this with this song on the car radio in a nasally induced falsetto, and I will show you someone who just doesn't get Christmas. This is actually the last Christmas song to reach number 1 on the US Billboard charts!



28. Silent Night, Boyz II Men
Long before Pitch Perfect and way before Glee...
And before 'N sync, Back Street Boys, and 98 Degrees...
This Philly boy band with harmonies that sounded just right...
Did a perfect acappela version of Silent Night!
Video - With the Fresh Prince: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rDigf1XM9DQ

27. I Want You For Christmas, Cheap Trick
A Recipe for disaster:
Take a classic song, and remake it with Christmas lyrics!
Unless... it is your song you are remaking.
Unless... it is your biggest hit.
Unless... You are Cheap Trick!!!
From 2012...


26. Sleigh Ride, Debbie Gibson
I really can't explain this one. When I put this together last year I must have been in a retro 80s mood. This makes no sense. If I did this again, I'd swap it out for another song, say Donny Hathaway's This Christmas... Oh well- good tune, OK version. Tomorrow, the big names start coming out.
 Tribute video from a stalker: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KjagSVRTyPs

25. Little Saint Nick, The Beach Boys
In an era when pop/rock bands only covered existing Christmas Carols, if they even did Christmas songs at all... America's all time best selling band wrote their own tune, only to have it debut 2 weeks after President Kennedy was killed. Despite the subdued Christmas launch in 1963, this song went on to be a gold/platinum record- and led the way for other rock artists to record original Christmas tunes.

Really interesting live version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P-vAZabkn3U

24. Little Drummer Boy (Peace On Earth), Bing Crosby & David Bowie



I can only imagine how surreal it was when watching this on TV in 1977 (I was out of the country at the time)... David showed up as a favor to his mom, and Bing had David on as a favor to his kids. Just like David, I dislike the song... but his original composition, Peace on Earth makes this the classic it has become. 


23. Jolly Old St. Nicholas, Chicago
Guilty pleasure this time out. My favorite band came out of a decade long slump (before going into a 15 year slump that they are still in) with this song. They take a Christmas standard, add their own new chorus and bridge. Not to mention inserting their trademark horn section.

22. Run, Run, Rudolph, Dave Edmunds
Arguably the first Rock Christmas song written in 1958, I did not go with the original Chuck Berry recording, and instead with the almost verbatim Dave Edmunds cover- A direct Homage to the original, but recorded with modern sensibilities. Trivia: Official song name is "Run Rudolph Run"

21. Jingle Bells, The Singing Dogs
Halfway to the Top! This version first charted in 1955 (Thereby qualifying as Rock era), and came back again and charted in 1971. When first recorded in 1949, this producer led ensemble was groundbreaking. The producer assembled the singers, recorded them individually on tape, sped up / reduced speed to get just the right pitch, and then merged the singers onto one track. This Danish group was revolutionary for its time, and the Producer led - cute young singers manipulated by technology, is still a model used today. Some may think of this as a novelty record, however this was my favorite Christmas tune until age 12.
Audio track from YouTube (Dr. Demento is a DJ who assemble the record, not the aritist): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MCBhQCCyhTo