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Showing posts with label Texas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Texas. Show all posts

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Five Things: Christmas Pop Music

Besides being tied for my favorite holiday for reasons previously explained, I love Thanksgiving because of the tradition of kicking off the Christmas season with the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade and (**drumroll**) putting up the Christmas tree! Both of these activities, no matter how cheesy or Hallmark-y, almost inevitably bring at least a couple of tears to my eyes every year. What can I say? I'm a sucker for sentimentality, especially when connected to tradition (I just heard an explosion of that "Tradition" song from Fiddler on the Roof in my head - weird).

Maybe it's because I've read too many books and watched too many movies (creating that strange belief that life must be saturated with perfectly executed moments of drama and nostalgic-montage-worthy scenes), I have certain requirements for the carrying out of said traditions. In the case of the Christmas tree, there must be some hot festive drink, such as apple cider or hot chocolate, cheerful involvement of multiple family/friend attendees in the decorating of the tree (with the angel on last - come on people! have a sense of ceremony!) and a background soundtrack of my favorite Christmas music. In honor of Thanksgiving week and in my excitement about dusting off those CDs and albums for the occasion, today's "Five Things" (yes, I want to make this a thing) is some of my favorite Christmas pop music! I don't say "Top Five," which is the accurate reference to the origin of the five list, the ever-awesome High Fidelity, because I can't commit to five favorites. Also - sidebar - many of these (maybe all?) are on a special mix CD made from another special mix CD made by a co-worker back in my San Antonio news days, for a shockingly friendly white elephant Christmas party in the studio (I came out a winner with a three-DVD box set of old-school Adam Sandler movies). That mix is still off the hook, Rhonda!

So, without further asides -

Five Things: Christmas Pop Songs


  1. "All I Want For Christmas is You," by Maria Carey. Nothing makes me sing and dance like this song. Instant happy. And the music video! Christmas bunnies? Yes, please. Snow play? Yes, please. Who can look as good as Maria sledding around in a big red snow suit? Also featured on my beloved Love, Actually. One of the first CDs I bought, at the now-defunct Border Bookstores (take a moment of silence). My CD is no longer around, as it was eaten mercilessly by an old-school six-disc player (it was really tall and big, since the CD had to loop around on their little carousel). But it's on the mix!
  2. "Pretty Paper" by Willie Nelson. What is more rustic, warm and lovable than Willie Nelson's voice?
  3. "Blue Christmas" by Elvis Presley. I love some Elvis, especially gospel-style. Classic!
  4. "Hard Candy Christmas" by Dolly Parton. Like Willie, Dolly really brings out the "home" in me. Now that I'm thousands of miles away, anything that connects me to Texas makes me feel sentimental. And, really, how can you help loving Dolly?
  5. "Santa Baby," sung by Eartha Kitt. So naughty, so nice! Christmas magic and commercialism, all wrapped up in one and perpetually fun to sing along to.
What are some of your favorite Christmas pop songs?

Thursday, November 15, 2012

Violins, Stop-Motion and Vinyl - What Could Be Better?

In following one of those procrastinator-friendly chains of online browsing, I happened onto several very cool things today, culminating in a music video from a collaboration album between violinist Hilary Hahn and Hauschka, called Silfra, and featuring a fabulous stop-motion animation by Hayley Morris. Let me see if I can trace the degrees of separation and highlight some of the treats along the way.

I started out from my FB homepage, which I hadn't visited in a while. I saw a post by a guitarist friend I haven't seen in years and from there went to browse his page. I noticed violinist Hilary Hahn among his "likes" and, a fan and player of violins myself, followed the chain to her page. I took a side trip from a link there to this article on the website "Vintage Guide to Texas" (those of you who know I'm a transplanted Texan and have a weakness for vintage can see how this was an inescapable trap). The article was there because it mentions that Hahn's album, the forementioned Silfra, was presented for sale ON VINYL during intermission at the  Dallas Symphony (swoon!). The article then goes on to talk about the return of vinyl and its superiority over other formats (word!).

At this point you can see an almost unbelievable series of irresistible crumbs seemingly left for me specifically by some (beneficent or malevolent?) guiding force of the global inter-webs (who clearly is an enemy of my dissertation). From the article I went to the album website, lured by the (a) violinist, (b) the album cover art (love!) and (c) the possibility of a good excuse to buy my one of my favorite things - one of those cool vinyl/mp3 combo albums (the record comes with a code to download a digital copy - what else can a millennial girl ask for from her music?). Once there I went to check out the advertised music video for "Bounce Bounce," was delighted by the animation, jumped to check out the page of the director and animator Hayley Morris, and was even more delighted by the photographic proof of her surely enchanting elven childhood, affinity to things miniature (me too me too!) and the rest of the description of her sources of inspiration.

Has there ever been a more worthy and fruitful internet chain journey? I think not. With that, I leave you with the music video for "Bounce Bounce":