Christmas
Blues (aka The Savoy Jazz Christmas Album)
consists of an odd, often fabulous mix of obscure blues, jazz, and jive from
the rich vaults of Savoy Jazz Records. Among its many
treasures
are
Jimmy
Butler's
outrageously salacious "Trim Your Tree" (read
more); the Marshall Brothers' romping "Mr. Santa's Boogie" featuring
former members of prototypical doo woppers the Ravens; and "Santa's
Secret" by
Johnny Guarnieri with Slam Stewart, later recorded by the Squirrel Nut Zippers
under it's more intuitive name: "Santa
Claus Is Smoking Reefer." Wild stuff!
Plus, we get yuletide wax from blues giants like Big
Maybelle and
Gatemouth Moore, and wacky novelties like Debbie
Dabney's hormonally-charged
"I Want To Spend Christmas With Elvis." The latter record,
by the way, was originally released on Regent Records under the name Marlene
Paul. Even better, it
was written by a young Bobby Darin and Don Kirshner and featured the rock 'n'
roll guitar of - get this - Kenny Burrell!
Historically speaking,
though, Christmas
Blues' foremost archive is the Ravens'
1948 version of "White Christmas," an obvious blueprint for the
Drifters' definitive 1954 rendition - one of the greatest Christmas songs
ever (read more). Christmas
Blues also
includes the Marshall Brothers' "Mr. Santa's Boogie" (1951) featuring former
Raven and future Ink Spot Maithe Marshall.
Savoy originally issued Christmas
Blues on LP in Japan in 1985. The original
CD edition (1994) changed the cover art, but little else. Reissued again
in 2003, Christmas
Blues swelled by a grand total of one track. First, Savoy added three tracks
- the flipsides of the Big Maybelle and Ravens singles, plus a version of "White
Christmas" by
the Meltones (which, given the sketchy annotation, I can only assume is not Mel
Torme's early group, usually spelled Mel-Tones...). But, then the label subtracted
two obscure tracks by the equally obscure A.B. Green - no great loss, but they
could've (easily) fit it all on one CD. Sadly, Savoy also dropped the cool
original LP liner notes - faithfully reproduced in the first CD edition.