A
singer of remarkable grace, Tony
Bennett (read more) waxed this gem for Columbia in 1968 - well after his
pop chart salad days but well before his hipster-fueled comeback late in the
century.
During that period (1994, to be exact), Snowfall: The Christmas Album was
reissued with a contemporary cover and superfluous bonus track, "I'll
Be Home for Christmas" (recorded live on The Jon Stewart Show).
Neither of those factors detract from the tasteful beauty of the original album.
While not an artistic home run, Snowfall is
a solid double or triple, filled with well-chosen standards and a handful of
surprises including the rarely recorded "Christmasland" and the jazzy
title tune. Ten years later, Snowfall was
repackaged yet again, to little discernable effect - and certainly with little
cause for fans to purchase the album once more. The 2007 edition, though, adds a lot of value - a five-song DVD excerpted from his 1992 Family Christmas special (and another redesigned cover).
More recently, Bennett recorded a Christmas album with the London Symphony
Orchestra and Chorus, Christmas
With Tony Bennett (2002), released on a limited basis through Hallmark
Gold Crown card shops. Recorded live in London's Abbey Road studios, it's a
warm, traditional affair - pleasant but inessential. Most disappointingly,
Bennett adds vocals to merely half the tracks; the remainder is strictly orchestral
fluff. You see, Tony Bennett could sing the phone book and make it sound great.
Well, here he does, adding his distinctive flair to six resolutely predictable
carols - and he transforms the otherwise unexciting Christmas
With Tony Bennett into something nearly memorable. On an undisputed classic
like Mel Torme's "Christmas Song," Tony and the London Symphony sound like
old friends - comfortable, amiable, and simpatico. Still, the album stacks
up poorly against Snowfall,
making the latter disc a far more compulsory purchase.
Much
better, however, are a couple of Christmas tracks Bennett leaked out on recent
albums. First, there's the urban celebration of "It's Christmas In Herald
Square," a hidden track from Playground,
Bennett's children's album from 1998. Second, we have the wonderful "A Christmas
Love Song," a bonus track found only on the Barnes & Noble limited edition
of The
Art Of Romance (2004). Written by Johnny Mandel and Alan & Marilyn Bergman, "A
Christmas Love Song" is a modern (though underappreciated) classic. Bennett's
interpretation - produced by Mandel and featuring harmonica virtuoso Toots Theilman
- is impeccable. Finally, for diehard collectors, the imported version of The
Art Of Romance has yet another rare holiday song - "All I Want for Christmas
Is You."
Bennett also participated in Our
Favorite Things (2001), an album taken from one of those annual, star-studded
PBS Christmas concerts in Vienna, Austria. The recording also features child
soprano Charlotte Church, third tenor Placido Domingo, and rhythm & blues
chanteuse Vanessa Williams. Our
Favorite Things' primary function seems to be making Christmas
With Tony Bennett sound like Snowfall in
comparison. In the end, I recommend it only for soccer moms and stuffed shirts. [top of page]