Christmas CDs |
We have searched the Amazon library for the best Christmas recordings, so you don't have to. Take a look at our selection of Classical Christmas Music and Popular Christmas Music, though you can also check out over 5,000 other Christmas related titles via the following link. You can also select from Amazon's total portfolio of recorded music (More than a million titles currently in publication.) Alternatively, you can study the latest Best Sellers list at . You can also access any product of any category within Amazon's entire stock, by using the Search Box at the bottom of this page. |
Lichfield Cathedral Choir
I can tell you without reservation that the Lichfield Cathedral Choir can always be relied upon to produce wonderful Christmas music, because I have heard them do so at first hand on many occasions over the years. Al'
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" John
Rutter
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Clare College Choir with John Rutter
Initially released in
1979, this album built on the success of the legendary
"Carols for Choirs" volumes in establishing John Rutter's name
with the wider public, and it gave a strong hint that he was more than
just a talented composer-arranger. As the many subsequent releases on
the Collegium label have also shown, Rutter is a deeply sensitive and
musical conductor, alive to the color of words, always allowing phrases
to breathe naturally. The accomplished Clare College Choir features male
and female voices, the latter providing a more rounded alternative to
those world-famous neighbors in Cambridge. Included are many of Rutter's
own easy-listening carol arrangements ("King Jesus Hath a
Garden" and "Wexford Carol," for example), plus others by
the likes of Vaughan Williams and David Willcocks, while "Donkey
Carol" and "Mary's Lullaby" are quintessential Rutter
originals. Only a few numbers can be classed (statistically) as all-time
Christmas faves--the likes of "The Holly and the Ivy" and
"Ding Dong Merrily on High"--but this needn't deter anyone
from snapping up what is the perfect album to accompany Christmas pud
mixing (preferably by candlelight, imagining the twilight scene in Ely
Cathedral's Lady Chapel, whose glorious acoustic graces the sound). |
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Chanticleer
I simply don't have the words to describe the sublimity of this CD. Breathtaking? Sublime? I'm not sure the right words have been invented for it. It was my first Chanticleer CD, recommended by a music club, and it certainly hasn't been my last, but it's still my favorite. I love it so much that I listen to it year-round--even in the heat of summer, when I put on this CD, it's Christmastime to me by the end of "Es ist ein Ros". The voices are simply amazing. It sounds like angels singing. I think
part of the haunting, resounding sound that sets this CD apart from
other choral CDs (and even from other Chanticleer ones) is that it was
recorded in a cathedral, so the acoustics are amazing . I don't
know all that much about music theory, so I'm sure my words seem
amateurish and maybe a little silly, but this is a truly glorious CD.
Reviewer Amy Keene, Springfield MO.
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J.S. Bach |
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"Rutter: Music For Christmas" Cambridge Singers The whole programme is a delight, a truly elevating experience. It is my idea of perfect Christmas music. How could it be otherwise with most of the musical arrangements by John Rutter, one of the great names of English choral music. Perfect! Give yourself a treat. Buy it immediately.
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City
of London Symphonium
More wonderful Christmas compositions and arrangements by John Rutter. You cannot find better classical Christmas music than this.
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The Choir of Trinity Church Recorded at Trinity Church in Wall Street in the heart of New York and released about a month after the World Trade Center tragedy, this wonderful celebration of Christmas by this much praised choir contains many old favorites such as "The Holly and the Ivy", "Away in a Manger", "Oh Little Town of Bethlehem" and "Silent Night". Just the right music for those in pursuit of the true spirit of Christmas.
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Chanticleer No matter what your musical tastes are, you will enjoy this outstanding recording of Christmas music that contains an impressive array of traditional and contemporary material. This Grammy winning all-male choir sings songs with great beauty and clarity and their vocal versatility enables them to achieve subtle variations in color and musicality. This is a magnificent CD that I would recommend to anyone.
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'Christmas Gift for You' this
is arguably the finest rock & roll Christmas album of all time.
Recorded in 1957 at the height of his artistry--when he truly could be
called the King of Rock & Roll--this album demonstrates Presley
having a lot of vocal fun with a variety of styles, whether it's a carol
("Silent Night") or pop standard (Gene Autry's "Here Comes Santa Claus"). He does one of the
greatest versions of "White Christmas" ever recorded,
basically using the Drifters' version as a blueprint--and then singing all the parts himself. His
"I'll Be Home for Christmas" is definitive--but the best
moments are the "new" tracks written specifically for this
release, including the classic "Blue Christmas," Lieber &
Stoller's "Santa Claus Is Back in Town" (one of the most
sexually suggestive holiday tunes ever), and the wonderful, pop-based
"Santa, Bring My Baby Back to Me." All these tracks are
available on the 'King of Rock and Roll' box set--but if you don't own that, this
belongs under any Christmas tree--though Elvis fans have been known to
listen to tracks from this in the middle of July! --Bill Holdship |
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Various Artists
One of my favorite Christmas CDs. I got the two album set over 20 years ago. Now they've added a Marvin Gaye bonus track. Too bad they didn't include his up-tempo "Purple Snowflakes" as well. What I like best about this CD is its variety of musical styles. Stevie Wonder shines on a couple of originals that are now Christmas standards: the thought provoking Someday At Christmas and the festive What Christmas Means To Me. Everyone's favorite Jehovah's Witnesses, The Jackson 5, (who didn't celebrate Christmas but apparently recorded whatever Motown asked them to) add youthful exhuberance with Santa Claus Is Coming To Town, Frosty The Snowman, and I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus. The Temptations show off their versatility, their tracks among the strongest cuts, be they fun (Rudolph) or poignant (My Christmas Tree, Silent Night). The Supremes' stuff is okay. Their best Christmas tune, the haunting Born Of Mary, isn't on this set. Their take on The Children's Song though will have you ding-donging for days. BY the way: all the kids mentioned in this song belong to Diana's main squeeze at the time, Berry Gordy. Reviewer: James E. Bagley, PA.
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By Nat King Cole
Christmas was not Christmas in my home without the Nat King Cole vinyl playing on our old record player. When that stopped working, we bought the CD version because we missed the sound of his smooth voice singing warm, heartfelt traditional Christmas tunes. His version of "The Christmas Song" is THE classic while remakes have yet to come close. The rest of the album is up to par with "The Christmas Song" and some songs even better depending on your taste. It is not flashy, overdone with loud choirs or unnecessary production. It is just right and you will not regret adding it to your annual rotation. On the other hand, who says you have to wait until Christmas? Reviewer: Kandy from Home of the Lost World!
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Motown
Artistes
This lavish holiday set has been called the greatest rock & roll Christmas album of all time. That's an opinion that's tough to argue with when you find yourself immersed in the massive sounds painstakingly crafted by legendary producer Phil Spector. His "wall-of-sound" technique is perfectly suited to the music of the season, as he proves with layer upon layer of piano, sleigh bells, buoyant percussion and, of course, those legendary Spector sound harmonies. The Crystals turn their sassy interplay into sheer magic on "Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town", The Ronettes stroll sweetly through numbers like "Sleigh Ride" and Darlene Love delivers a real knockout punch with her yearning version of "Christmas (Baby, Please Come Home)". Sure to become the soundtrack for your holidays. David Sprague
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Various Artistes
The title doesn't lie, even if it sounds like a hyperbolic pitch from some old late-night cable TV ad'. With 36 tracks of various genres spread over two disks, "Now That's What I Call Christmas" might be the best, most eclectic 'value plus' holiday record ever released, assuming your tastes embrace crooners such as Cole, Crosby and Como, plus contemporary boy bands such as Boyz II Men, as well as the ubiquitous Britney Spears. In between there
are the sumptuous classics by Bobby Helms, Brenda Lee, the Beachboys and
Burl Ives on disk one, balanced on disc two by more recent standards,
including Bruce Springsteen's live version of "Santa Claus Is Comin' to
Town" and John and Yoko's "Happy Xmas (War is Over)."
You're not obligated to like everything here, but that's why Santa
invented the forward button on your CD player. --Martin Keller |
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by The Tweenies
"A Tweenies Christmas" comes hot on the heels of their sell-out stadium tours, the success of their debut album "Friends Forever" and the continued success of their TV show. Filled equally with new compositions and cover versions of favourite festive tunes (there's seven of each on the album), this is the ideal collection for getting children (and parents) into the Christmas party mood. Opener "I Believe in Christmas" is a swinging, pop number in the style of S Club 7s "Reach" but with added sleigh bells. If it wasn't for the baby-speak Tweenie vocals, it would be difficult to differentiate between this track and Rachel and Co "doing their thing". Another new tune "Light Up the World" is a warm, feel-good song set on Christmas Eve, while "Fab-A-Rooney Christmas" is the Tweenies jovial Christmas anthem. At times though the toddler-talk (or singing) does complement the song, for instance Milo's nasal rendition of "Merry Xmas Everybody" almost resembles Noddy Holder's blaring vocals on the Slade original. --John Galilee Young children love the Tweenies with their high activity, music filled TV shows. They are so colorful and lively and the characters so personable that I never complain when I'm asked to watch the show with the kids. They make great videos too, which are available through the Christmas Videos section. Al'
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John Denver
Price |
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Barbra
Streisand
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Love, Bon Jovi, Crow, Powder,
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Various Artistes |
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Anne Murray
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Michael McDonald |
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Nancy Wilson |