Description
Album Features | |
UPC: | 012805198424 |
Artist: | Mannheim Steamroller |
Format: | CD |
Release Year: | 2005 |
Record Label: | American Gramaphone Records |
Genre: | Christmas, Rock & Pop |
Track Listing
1. Deck the Halls
2. We Three Kings
3. Jeanette, Isabella Bring a Torch
4. Coventry Carol
5. Good King Wenceslas
6. Wassail Wassail
7. Carol of the Birds
8. I Saw Three Ships
9. Gentlemen God Rest Ye Merry
10. Gentlemen God Rest Ye Merry
11. Stille Nacht
Details | |
Playing Time: | 34 min. |
Producer: | Chip Davis |
Distributor: | Fontana Distribution |
Recording Type: | Studio |
Recording Mode: | Stereo |
SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes
Also available in the CHRISTMAS COLLECTION box set with CHRISTMAS EXTRAORDINARE, A FRESH AIRE CHRISTMAS and CHRISTMAS IN THE AIRE.Mannheim Steamroller: Ron Cooley (acoustic & 12-string guitars); Eric Hansen (lute, bass); Steve Shipps (violin); David Low (cello); Richard Lohmann, Richard Altenbach, Grace Granata, Wayne Anderson, Bill Ritchie, Michelle Brill, Michael Strauss, Roxanne Adams (strings); Mary Walter (harp); Willis Ann Ross (flute); Bobby Jenkins (oboe); David “High D” Kappy (French horn); Jackson Berkey (synthesizers, harpsichord, clavichord, toy piano, Fender Rhodes, vocals, camel bells); Chip Davis (drums, percussion, recorder, dulcimer, dulcian, crumhorn, camel bells, vocals).Additional personnel: Ron Dabbs (sound effects, camel bells).Christmas 1984 is the first holiday album the Mannheim Steamroller released, and it remains their definitive work. Chip Davis never strayed from the clean, airy instrumental style that he exhibits here (and earlier perfected on his Fresh Aire albums), but it is here where it all sounded fresh. It’s also where he had his best selection of songs, tackling a variety of classic carols like “Deck the Halls,” “We Three Kings,” “Good King Wenceslas,” “Wassail, Wassail,” “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen,” and “I Saw Three Ships.” Some listeners never found the Mannheim formula that engaging, but anyone who his been captured by one of their holiday records should investigate Christmas 1984, which is where it all began. ~ Rodney Batdorf