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Showing posts with label Honky Tonk Confidential. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Honky Tonk Confidential. Show all posts

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Here Comes Santa Claus, Part 3

My latest holiday mix is called Here Comes Santa Clausand a couple of days ago I started sharing some of my thoughts about the 38 individual tracks that appear on it. I plan to review a few tracks each day until done, and while I'm reviewing the tracks from first to last, each day's post will proceed in reverse order to yield a final list that runs from 43 to 1 without bouncing back a few spaces at the start of each new post. Today, I've got some background on Tracks 7, 8 and 9:

Track 9
Honky Tonk Hanukkah, by Honky Tonk Confidential (2006)
Bob Scheiffer with his band, Honky Tonk Confidential
I featured a great track by Honky Tonk Confidential (HTC) called Christmas Prison on my 2011 holiday mix, and "Honky Tonk Hanukkah" was a relatively easy choice for the follow-up. It's easy to see why this song is their best-selling download, for like "Christmas Prison" it's got an infectious melody and the band really plays the hell out of it. Based in Washington, DC, HTC's had a lot of press the past couple of years because of their association with Bob Scheiffer, occasional presidential debate moderator and host of CBS's Face the Nation. Scheiffer's one of the few real honest-to-God professional journalists left in Washington, and while he did a fine job moderating the third and final debate this Fall between President Barack Obama and that other guy, he seems to be enjoying himself even more when he's onstage with "his band." Sure looks like fun to me. Incidentally, I wrote a little bit about holiday surf rock instrumentals in yesterday's post and was thrilled (and a little surprised) to discover that this fine country bluegrass band has stuck its collective toe in that water, too. So put on your baggies and check out HTC's surf rockin' version of O Come O Come Emmanuel.

Track 8
Happy Holidays Jingle
I have no idea who produced this track or where it came from, but I've had it kicking around on my computer for at least five or six years and it seemed like a fun little addition to this year's mix.

Track 7
Here Comes Santa Claus, by Esquivel (1959)
Esquivel
The title track of this year’s compilation is a genuine Christmas classic, written in 1947 by Gene Autry and Oakley Haldeman, and while it’s been recorded by hundreds of different artists and was cited by ASCAP several years ago as the 21st most frequently performed Christmas song of all time, this is the first and only time it’s turned up on one of my mixes. The song was inspired by Autry’s participation in the annual Santa Claus Lane Parade, now known as the Hollywood Christmas Parade. Autry was a fixture at the annual event, and as he rode his horse along the route in 1946 he heard crowds of children wherever he was shouting “Here Comes Santa Claus!” From that line, he says, the song was born. Autry's first public performance of the song was on the Gene Autry Melody Ranch Radio Show before a live radio audience on November 30, 1947 (65 years ago tomorrow). The song quickly became a big hit, ultimately reaching #7 on the Billboard singles chart that winter. It’s subsequently been recorded by a wide range of artists including Elvis Presley, Willie Nelson, Billy Idol, Bob Dylan, and Ludacris, and Autry himself released two additional versions of the song in 1953 and 1957. The version I used for this year’s mix is by the late Juan Garcia Esquivel, better known simply as Esquivel. Originally recorded in 1959, Esquivel’s version was first released that same year as part of the RCA Victor compilation “The Merriest of Christmas Pops,” but it made a bigger splash when it was re-released 37 years later on the last album Esquivel worked on, Merry Christmas from the Space Age Bachelor Pad. In the interim, Esquivel had slowly built an impressive following with his signature blend of quirky instrumental pop that ultimately became known as “sophisticated lounge” or “space age bachelor pad” music. Marked by its wordless vocals, exotic percussion and deliberately overstated dynamic shifts, Esquivel’s style is often described in jazz-related terms, but in contrast to most modern jazz, it tends to be tightly arranged and carefully scripted. I've used stuff from Esquivel on two of my previous mixes – "Stop Singing Those Dreadful Songs," which featured holiday greetings from the artist, and "Hooray for Santa Claus," which included Esquivel’s version of "Auld Lang Syne." He was a cool cat and a solid hipster whose stuff was always in orbit.

Incidentally, the Gene Autry website has a wealth of Christmas-related material in a special section called Gene Autry's Cowboy Christmas. In addition to "Here Comes Santa Claus," Autry recorded dozens of other holiday tunes, and in 1949 his version of Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer hit #1 on the Billboard singles chart. It's the only song in Billboard history to ever fall off the chart completely from the #1 position. You can read more about Autry's other holiday releases and even download lots of free stuff including some great desktop backgrounds from the Autry site. But don't delay! There's no guarantee it will remain up past Christmas.

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Gee Whiz ... It's Christmas (Again!), Part 4

My 2011 holiday CD is titled Gee Whiz ... It's Christmas (Again!), and my first posts on this new blog have featured some of my thoughts about the individual tracks that appear on it. I'm reviewing the 43 tracks from start to finish, however, the tracks will be presented in reverse order within each day's individual post. Today's post looks at Tracks 13 through 16:

Track 16
Christmas Prison, by Honky Tonk Confidential (2006)
Honky Tonk Confidential
Since its founding in 1997, the Washington, DC-based band Honky Tonk Confidential has released four albums and attracted lots of favorable media attention. Their music has been described as “retro/alternative country,” and they have at least an album's worth of holiday tunes among their original material. “Christmas Prison” can be found on the band's 2006 release, Who Gets the Fruitcake This Year? It paints a frightening picture of what bad girls and boys can expect if they don’t change their ways:
Little kids take my advice
Don’t be naughty please be nice
Else you’ll have to pay the price
Down in Christmas Prison
Locks and bars on all the doors
Cold grey stone upon the floors
All the elves wear .44s
Down in Christmas Prison
Down in Christmas Prison
Is where you’ll spend your Yule
If you think that being bad is good or hip or cool
Maximum security is the place you’re bound to be
Don’t believe me? Wait and see
Down in Christmas Prison

What your parents said is true
Everything you say and do
Warden Santa’s watching you
Down in Christmas Prison

He heard Little Betty cuss
He heard Charlotte make a fuss
Now they’re here with all of us
Down in Christmas Prison

Down in Christmas Prison
You’ll have no Christmas cheer
Bread and water stuffing
Is all you’ll get this year
And when at last they set you free
You’ll walk out and it will be
February already
Down in Christmas Prison
The band’s latest album is called Road Kill Stew and Other News and features CBS News anchor Bob Schieffer, who penned the lyrics to four tracks and sings on one, titled, appropriately enough, "TV Anchorman." This and other albums from Honky Tonk Confidential are available on their website or through amazon.com or iTunes.  

Track 15
Christmas Lost and Found (Part 3), from Davey and Goliath (1960)
See Comments on Track 6

Track 14
Christmas Is For Everyone, by The Neighborhood Kids

Christmas is for everyone
But more for some than others
Christmas is for those who love
Their fellow men as brothers
For those who hear the reindeer and whose tears flow freely when
The carolers sing peace on Earth
And goodwill among men
Using this standard, is Christmas for you?

Track 13
Christmas Arrives Early for First Family, Hearst News of the Day Newsreel (1961)
This track is an excerpt from a 1961 newsreel film produced for American theaters by the Hearst Corporation as part of its News of the Day series. I had no idea newsreels were still being made in the early 1960s, but it seems the Hearst films were actually produced until 1967.  As a longtime Kennedy partisan, I found this clip extremely poignant. Tragically, of course, the Kennedys spent only two Christmases in the White House, as President Kennedy was inaugurated in January 1961 and assassinated shortly before Thanksgiving in 1963.