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The Greatest Christmas Song
American Spectator, by Daniel J. Flynn

Original Article

Posted By:StormCnter, 12/8/2012 5:35:28 AM

´Tis the season for holiday music that intrudes, annoys, and entraps. Like a zombie, "Feliz Navidad" dies every year only to return -- everywhere. On the car radio, in the mall, on hold, at your kid´s school (provided they omit the holiday´s first syllable) you can´t escape Christmas music. Bah! Humbug! The radio staples are as amorphous as they are ubiquitous. The Pogues offer a Christmas anthem for St. Patrick´s Day in "A Fairytale of New York." Greg Lake´s "I Believe in Father Christmas" hits the ears as a Yuletide hymn for atheists.

Comments:
Strange piece. There´s a link to a YouTube rendition of the song.

  

Post Reply  

Reply 1 - Posted by: Rather Read, 12/8/2012 5:53:33 AM     (No. 9054800)

I hate Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas. Hate it will the pure and white hot hate of a trillion burning suns. Every time I go into a store that dirge is being sung, usually by someone who can´t sing to begin with.

Ever since I worked in a mall for five years, I have hated almost all sung Christmas carols. Give me instrumental ones.


Reply 2 - Posted by: chumley, 12/8/2012 6:20:17 AM     (No. 9054806)

I dont think there are any I really hate. I do turn up the radio for any of Karen Carpenter´s Christmas songs. If ever an angel could sing, she´s it.


   

 

  


 
Reply 3 - Posted by: StormCnter, 12/8/2012 6:40:10 AM     (No. 9054817)

I enjoy the Mannheim Steamroller versions.


Reply 4 - Posted by: mominNoCA, 12/8/2012 6:48:49 AM     (No. 9054826)

Although I like listening to Rush, I absolutely hate Manheim Steamroller. It sounds like a blend of synth-pop and my late Grandma´s Octagon organ that played beats when you hit different switches. We heard it every time we visited her for Christmas back in the 1970s.


Reply 5 - Posted by: JLoophole, 12/8/2012 7:08:59 AM     (No. 9054850)

I don´t want to roast one more chestnut on any open fire, and i despise the iversung, overwrought Beyonce type versions out there now, but I do like most traditional Christmas music. Instrumental is great, but meaningful lyrics are too.

Some of my favorites- Appalachian Snowfall by Trans Siberian Orchestra...fantastic. ( but we didn´t care for TSO at all in concert, funny how that works), Mary Did You Know, by Kenny Rogers. O Holy Night, by Aaron Neville, Simple Gifts...I can´t remember who sings the version I like.


Reply 6 - Posted by: JLoophole, 12/8/2012 7:11:24 AM     (No. 9054853)

Ahhhh....ok, make that "oversung" ...it´s not me, it´s my iPad. Honest. =)


Reply 7 - Posted by: cartcart, 12/8/2012 7:20:47 AM     (No. 9054868)

Silent Night sung by our grandkids is the top Christmas song of all time for me. Sweet little angels--each one!


   

 

  


 
Reply 8 - Posted by: mominNoCA, 12/8/2012 7:23:14 AM     (No. 9054871)

I love to watch a beautiful rendition of I Wonder as I Wander by a choir from a college in Arkansas on YouTube. For some reason, choral Christmas music is the most beautiful to me. I´ll never tire of Carol of the Bells, either.


Reply 9 - Posted by: Thos Weatherby, 12/8/2012 7:26:57 AM     (No. 9054877)

Jack Frost and the Hooded Crow. But for the older songs, nothing seems to beat the Velvet´s Frog rendition of the Christmas Song.


Reply 10 - Posted by: LoneVoice, 12/8/2012 7:33:59 AM     (No. 9054884)

The author of this is just another hate-the-rich idiot. He´s insinuating that Ray Davys deserved to be shot for the sin of becoming rich.


Reply 11 - Posted by: MissMolly, 12/8/2012 7:50:59 AM     (No. 9054910)

Okay, I´ll bite. What in the world does Rush Limbaugh have to do with Mannheim Steamroller?


Reply 12 - Posted by: ROLFnader, 12/8/2012 7:56:30 AM     (No. 9054917)

We have an extensive collection of Christmas music and the CD that gets played the most here ( I think we´ve worn out at least one since I bought it in 2000) is Vince Gill´s " Let There Be Peace On Earth". I don´t own any of Karen Carpenter´s (thanks for the tip) but that poster would also love Anne Murray´s contribution.


   

 



 
Reply 13 - Posted by: abiner, 12/8/2012 8:12:50 AM     (No. 9054944)

The one I absolutely can´t stand is Santa Claus is Coming to Town by Michael Jackson. I´ve heard better sounds coming from an iron rod scraping an old glass bottle.

If his voice were any higher, only dogs would be able to hear it.


Reply 14 - Posted by: tivadoc, 12/8/2012 8:19:11 AM     (No. 9054955)

Andy Williams Christmas album is a personal favorite. I will miss the yearly Christmas time interview he would give this time of year. RIP, Mr Williams.


Reply 15 - Posted by: 45_Auto, 12/8/2012 8:25:18 AM     (No. 9054965)

Christmas songs are some of the most annoying of the year and get serious overplay. Grandma Got Runover By ARaindeer is one of "The Most" annoying of the lot. I will listen to Surfers Christmas List by the Safaries though, and Santa And The Sidewalk Surfer by The Crossfires/Turtles.


Reply 16 - Posted by: Chuzzles, 12/8/2012 8:29:03 AM     (No. 9054973)

I agree with most of the choices here. But my favorite commercial usage for a Christmas song is the commercial a few years ago from Staples advertising their back to school stuff. It´s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year! by Andy Williams is a great version. Mary´s Boy Child by Boney Em(sp?) with the steel drums and Caribbean sound is one of my favorites.


Reply 17 - Posted by: pomom, 12/8/2012 8:38:29 AM     (No. 9054994)

My favorites include ´´Go Tell It On The Mountain´´ sung by Mahalia Jackson, ´´Old Toy Trains´´ by Roger Miller, and ´´Silent Night´´ sung by the Oakridge Boys. I love ALL Christmas music, especially the old standards and it´s played all day in my home.


   

 

  


 
Reply 18 - Posted by: TigerLilly, 12/8/2012 8:48:20 AM     (No. 9055010)

It´s not Chritmas without hearing Elvis sing "I´ll Be Home for Christmas."


Reply 19 - Posted by: gartenfrau, 12/8/2012 8:56:07 AM     (No. 9055029)

I destest most Christmas songs, especally "Feliz Navidad" and "And So It Is Chrstmas" by ELP. I love most true carols, as they actually have something to do with the Savior´s birth. I´ve been listening to XM channel 74 or 75 as they´ve been playing the insrumental and religious Christmas music. I got the chills listenig to the Hallelujah Chorus last night.


Reply 20 - Posted by: TexaTucky, 12/8/2012 9:01:51 AM     (No. 9055039)

#12, they´re his favorite. He´s been their biggest cheerleader for years.


Reply 21 - Posted by: PoliticalJunky, 12/8/2012 9:03:34 AM     (No. 9055044)

The Little Drummer Boy, as sung by a boy choir and no one else. Silent Night sung by Andy Williams or Perry Como or as an instrumental. And, while not really a Christmas song, Ave Maria as sung by Perry Como, who hit the high notes with great ease and was even better than Andy Williams.


Reply 22 - Posted by: mominNoCA, 12/8/2012 9:04:24 AM     (No. 9055046)

#12,

He usually raves about Manheim Steamroller during the Christmas season. I´ve been too busy to listen recently, so I don´t know if he still does that.

Speaking also of And So It Is Christmas, the version I remember most is with John Lennon and Yoko Ono. Ack! It´s torture to listen to that one.


   

 



 
Reply 23 - Posted by: HisHandmaiden, 12/8/2012 9:10:20 AM     (No. 9055050)

#12, before his implant, when MS first appeared, he introduced their Christmas CDs as his bumper music...


Reply 24 - Posted by: ramona, 12/8/2012 9:12:37 AM     (No. 9055053)

For pure fun I do enjoy Bruce Springsteen´s version of Santa Claus is Coming to Town. Otherwise I love the German/Austrian/Scandinavian jul sanger. The Vienna Choir Boys - dreamy!

Back in the early ´90´s I bought a series of inexpensive drugstore cassette tapes, all put out by a group in Nashville. Mostly instrumentals - piano, guitar, sax, woodwinds, etc. Gorgeous instrumentation, comforting, soothing arrangements of traditional and some new Christmas music. The producer/arranger on these is John Darnall. The cassettes have been replaced with CD´s and I treasure this music. Here´s a link to the playlist of one that is my all time favorite, Midnight Clear: http://tinyurl.com/cm5etzp

All my heart rejoices-Merry Christmas everyone!

Ramona (the Pest)


Reply 25 - Posted by: bmoc, 12/8/2012 9:34:31 AM     (No. 9055098)

My personal Christmas favorite is "My Grownup Christmas List" by Amy Grant. Beautiful song and voice. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m_TKNW7q_34


Reply 26 - Posted by: AnnG, 12/8/2012 9:43:39 AM     (No. 9055118)

Any song by Bing Crosby, Nat King Cole, Andy Williams


Reply 27 - Posted by: Sunhan65, 12/8/2012 10:06:40 AM     (No. 9055158)

There´s no arguing over matters of taste, but "Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas" is a lovely song--bittersweet and especially lovely by Judy Garland. If memory serves, Captain Kangaroo also sang it on his children´s show, making it the song I associate with childhood Christmas memories. I´ve also grown to like "I´ve Heard The Bells" sung by Frank Sinatra.


Reply 28 - Posted by: choey, 12/8/2012 10:09:50 AM     (No. 9055167)

I´ll take "Chipmunks Roasting on an Open Fire". It sorta catches all my Christmas song irritations.


Reply 29 - Posted by: JoniTx, 12/8/2012 10:11:38 AM     (No. 9055170)

Agree with most here. I´d add to the above list, Jerry Vale and Perry Como. Years ago, in Austria, I purchased albums of amazing choirs, singing Christmas classics, love them still!

The Jerry Vale album ´He´ isn´t Christmas, but it gives one chills.


Reply 30 - Posted by: Judith, 12/8/2012 10:47:55 AM     (No. 9055232)

Years ago, as a child in my mother´s kitchen, while we were baking Christmas cookies, I´ll Be Home for Christmas came on the radio. She explained to me that that was written for the soldiers and their families during the war. That combination of memories (my father was a WWII)veteran makes me very nostalgic about that particular song. Imagine the soldiers across the sea, far from home in a nightmare scenario and the promise of coming home for Christmas....and the families here, waiting, hopefully, for their return.


Reply 31 - Posted by: zzzghy, 12/8/2012 11:06:07 AM     (No. 9055264)

I absolutely abhor Feliz Navidad. I hate it, man -- really.

Jose keeps repeating it, like a million fingernails on the biggest chalkboard in the solar system:

I wanna wish you a merry Christmas
I wanna wish you a merry Christmas
I wanna wish you a merry Christmas...

Well, JUST DO IT THEN! JEEZ!

You´re the dude sitting there with the guitar -- there´s nobody here bettter qualified than you. Just get it over with so we can all split.

"Little Drummer Boy" bugs me too. By the last pahrumpa-pum-pum, I´m ready to strangle my plastic Christmas tree.

Think about it. Mary just gave birth and is exhausted, Joseph is worried about how he´s going to pay for all of this, Baby Jesus is probably hungry and crying, the cows are freaking out, and here´s this strange little kid banging on a drum. That´s more Erma Bombeck than the gospels.


Reply 32 - Posted by: Starfire, 12/8/2012 1:01:25 PM     (No. 9055402)

Most Christmas music falls into one of three categories for me: traditional religious Christmas songs (Silent Night), nostalgic secular songs (I’ll be Home for Christmas) and fun modern stuff (Have a Holly Jolly Christmas).

I appreciate the upbeat tempo of ‘Feliz Navidad’ (Jose Feliciano version). Maybe it’s because I grew up in Texas and still have tamales for Christmas Eve dinner.

There are a few songs that really annoy me. Rap music and Christmas should never be combined…. NEVER! ‘Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer’ makes me want to hurt someone. ‘Little Drummer Boy’ is just annoyingly slow and it’s an unnecessary embellishment to the beauty of the biblical account. Otherwise, bring on the music. I need all the Christmas spirit I can muster this year.


Reply 33 - Posted by: KTWO, 12/8/2012 1:05:16 PM     (No. 9055405)

My vote is for "Silver Bells". It is simple, easy to sing, and cheerful.

And seldom played anymore.


Reply 34 - Posted by: Bla Bla, 12/8/2012 1:06:22 PM     (No. 9055406)

There is really only one "Christmas" song I absolutely hate:

So This Is Christmas/War Is Over by the Fab Four.

Whenever it comes on, I turn the channel. Without Christmas music as the wallwrapping of the season, it wouldn´t feel like Christmas at all. Flynn doesn´t know what he´s asking for.


Reply 35 - Posted by: pmarc078, 12/8/2012 1:29:03 PM     (No. 9055424)

"Fairytale of New York" by the Pogues..... best ever.


Reply 36 - Posted by: Gallo3, 12/8/2012 1:40:50 PM     (No. 9055437)

Back in 1988-92 when Rush started his nationwide show, he did not have the extensive list of sponsors he does today. So a portion of every three-hour show was commercials where Rush himself did some infomercial shilling for various products which his company sold through the mail.
Among these products were early home video cameras, and CD´s of his favorite Christmas Music- Mannheim Steamroller, a/k/a/ Chip Davis, whom had been a fellow DJ and jingle writer in Omaha, when Rush was in KC announcing baseball games for the KC Royals.
Chip had hit the big time with a series of hits based upon an ad campaign he composed for Old Home Bread where he played a trucker with the handle CJ McCall, the biggest hit being ´Convoy´.


Reply 37 - Posted by: supersid, 12/8/2012 1:43:50 PM     (No. 9055442)

I like them, including Feliz Navidad and the Rapapumpum. By the time it starts getting boring, the season is over.


Reply 38 - Posted by: bob913, 12/8/2012 3:29:55 PM     (No. 9055514)

I like most of the Christmas music except the more recent ones horribly auto tune sung by today´s "singers".

When you hear a song from say Nat King Cole or Frank Sinatra or Bing Crosby or Andy Williams etc they have great voices, music. The new "artists" are just awful sounding and they use what sounds like canned synthesizer music.

Chet Atkins guitar playing with Vince Gill- start at about 4 mins in for "Santa is coming to Town"

Vince Gill Amy Grant Chet Atkins Michael McDonald (Christmas)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1KgEJ9hwhSs


Reply 39 - Posted by: BigGeorgeTX, 12/8/2012 3:45:30 PM     (No. 9055540)

If you want to get the chills from the magnificence of a performance, find Martina McBride´s rendition of O Holy Night on YouTube. Both are excellent, but the a´capella version is my favorite, though it´s just one verse.

a´Capella: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=prQnpbxEpfY

Accompanied: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eMKxqcnwwAM

If you don´t have The Carpenter´s Christmas Portrait, Perry Como´s Christmas Album(s) or the one by Jim Reeves, get them. Not a bad track on any of them.


Reply 40 - Posted by: PoliticalJunky, 12/8/2012 4:04:32 PM     (No. 9055561)

Well, 33, you have a point. I am partial to Little Drummer Boy because my younger son was in a boy choir. I was at the rehearsal when they got the music to this song. The boys were all excited. I will admit "the ox and lamb kept time" gave me pause.


Reply 41 - Posted by: Sherlock, 12/8/2012 4:16:34 PM     (No. 9055578)

A Way In A Manger is my all time favorite, but also, love Sliver Bells, Santa Baby, and next favorite of all time is "Please Come Home For Christmas" by any body.


Reply 42 - Posted by: Penney, 12/8/2012 7:29:41 PM     (No. 9055761)

We LOVE Christmas music and enjoy both the familiar along with the new cantatas every year.

However, an exception was this morning on npr when the statist agitators there featured a DVD of gloomy original songs from a London with a song writer who doesn´t even like Christmas. Her songs, which were called, ´´secular,´´ Christmas music, were negative, depressing and did not reflect any understanding about Christmas joy. ...It was just another bummer segment directed against Christmas by npr at taxpayer´s expense.


Reply 43 - Posted by: udanja99, 12/8/2012 7:44:43 PM     (No. 9055781)

"So This is Christmas" wasn´t done by the Beatles, it was the creation of John Lennon and Yoko Ono and ranks right up there with that piece of absolute garbage "Imagine".

LOVE Manheim Steamroller and have every one of their Christmas CD´s. I start playing them on December 1 and go right on through til New Year´s Eve.


Reply 44 - Posted by: udanja99, 12/8/2012 7:47:23 PM     (No. 9055785)

Forgot to add, I absolutely loathe "Do They Know it´s Christmastime/Feed the World".


Reply 45 - Posted by: Rakasha, 12/8/2012 8:44:54 PM     (No. 9055838)

Has anyone else noticed that So This Is Christmas uses the tune from Old Stewball Was A Racehorse? They couldn´t even write an original melody.

My current favorite is TSO´s Christmas rendition of Pachelbel´s Canon. I heard Silver Bells performed by Elvis the other night; also very nice.

There are a lot of old ´folk´ carols that don´t get played much anymore, Bring A Torch, Jeanette, Isabella, Pat-A-Pan, Coventry Carol; all nice songs that are becoming forgotten.

Just for fun I´ll throw in Where Did My Snowman Go? and - a new one for us but my son likes it - I Want An Alien For Christmas.


Reply 46 - Posted by: Japanorama, 12/8/2012 11:13:42 PM     (No. 9055950)

I´ll Be Home for Christmas



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39 replie(s)
Weekly Standard, by Daniel Halper    Original Article
Posted By: StormCnter- 5/10/2013 5:55:08 AM     Post Reply
"Every year for the past few years, on Mother´s Day, I´ve gone--I´ve taken a delegation--into Afghanistan or Iraq, we´re alternating now, now Afghanistan--for Mother´s Day to say thank you to our moms and, by the way, our grandmothers, who are serving there. Some young grandmothers. But, nonetheless, grandmothers. To also thank all of our troops for what they do to protect America´s families. I won´t be going this particular weekend because we don´t have--you know, under sequestration, we don´t have codels."

Carney Blames Romney for
Politicizing Benghazi

38 replie(s)
Breitbart´s Big Government, by Ben Shapiro    Original Article
Posted By: KarenJ1- 5/10/2013 9:49:16 PM     Post Reply
Friday, White House press secretary Jay Carney blamed Mitt Romney and Republicans for “politicizing” the Benghazi terrorist attacks. Harkening back to a Mitt Romney press conference on September 12, 2012, which addressed the Benghazi attacks only in passing while focusing instead on the assault on the American embassy in Cairo, Egypt, Carney suggested that Romney had tried to target the innocent Obama administration for telling the truth about Benghazi. “Republicans, again, in this ongoing effort that began in the hours after the attack when Mitt Romney put out a press release to try to take political

John McCain Wants to
Blow Up The Cable Industry
As We Know It

37 replie(s)
Business Insider, by Jay Yarow    Original Article
Posted By: Fiesta del sol- 5/9/2013 1:19:00 PM     Post Reply
John McCain is going to release a bill that would dismantle cable as it´s currently constructed, Brenden Sasso at The Hill reports. The legislation would force cable companies and satellite TV providers to give consumers an option to pick and choose which channels they get. This is called "à la carte programming," and it´s long been a dream of consumers who only want a handful of channels. McCain tried to introduce similar legislation in 2006 and it went nowhere.

Report: Muslim cleric invited
to pray over fallen SEALs
damns them during service

32 replie(s)
Washington Times, by Jessica Chasmar    Original Article
Posted By: ScarletPimpernel- 5/9/2013 6:23:57 PM     Post Reply
The families of Navy SEALs killed in an August 2011 shoot-down of a helicopter in Afghanistan spoke at a press conference Thursday morning, citing a number of grievances, including an allegation that the Pentagon invited a Muslim cleric who “disparaged in Arabic the memory of these servicemen.” In addition to blasting the Obama administration for the mission and for an official investigation they deemed a cover-up, the families complained that “military brass, while prohibiting any mention of a Judeo-Christian God, invited a Muslim cleric to the funeral for the fallen

IRS Apologizes for Targeting
Conservative Groups

32 replie(s)
Associated Press, by Stephen Ohlemacher    Original Article
Posted By: Judy W.- 5/10/2013 11:14:39 AM     Post Reply
WASHINGTON — The Internal Revenue Service is apologizing for inappropriately flagging conservative political groups for additional reviews during the 2012 election to see if they were violating their tax-exempt status. Lois Lerner, who heads the IRS unit that oversees tax-exempt groups, said organizations that included the words "tea party" or "patriot" in their applications for tax-exempt status were singled out for additional reviews. Lerner said the practice, initiated by low-level workers in Cincinnati, was wrong and she apologized while speaking at a conference in Washington. Many conservative groups complained during the election

Let Benghazi´s Chips Fall
30 replie(s)
Wall Street Journal, by Editorial    Original Article
Posted By: Desert Fox- 5/9/2013 9:27:45 PM     Post Reply
Congressman Frank Wolf of Virginia has written House Speaker John Boehner, requesting the creation of a bipartisan Select Committee to investigate the Benghazi terror debacle. It is an excellent idea. A Select Committee is the only means available now for the U.S. political system to extricate itself from the labyrinth called Benghazi. There have been two fulcrum events in the accounting of what happened in Benghazi. The first was U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice´s September 16 declarations on TV that Benghazi was part of the Islamic world´s violent, spontaneous reaction to the incendiary California YouTube video.

Priest conducts Catholic
service to name 45 aborted
babies found in Gosnell clinic

29 replie(s)
Washington Times, by Jennifer Harper    Original Article
Posted By: mitzi- 5/9/2013 7:19:50 PM     Post Reply
A Catholic priest presided over a service Thursday to give proper names to the 45 babies whose bodies were found in the West Philadelphia abortion clinic of Dr. Kermit Gosnell. He is charged with killing five people - a patient and four viable babies that prosecutors say were born alive. He has also been charged with performing late-term abortions that violate Pennsylvania’s 24-week limit on the procedure. “People have names, people deserve names. The name expresses the person. The name recognizes that there is a person there.” said Father Frank Pavone during the

´Sex Superbug´ Worse than AIDS
Hits Hawaii

28 replie(s)
Breitbart´s Big Government, by William Bigelow    Original Article
Posted By: mitzi- 5/9/2013 10:30:57 PM     Post Reply
A new deadly “sex superbug” has been found in two individuals in Hawaii, after surfacing in Japan in 2011. H041, a form of gonorrhea that is resistant to all antibiotics presently available, is considered as deadly as AIDS, and is much faster at killing people. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention wants upward of $50 million from Congress to find an antibiotic that will kill the virus, which has also been found in California and Norway. Alan Christianson, a doctor of naturopathic medicine, said:


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