Today’s Christmas song post is a quick one. Here’s The Drifters, Clyde McPhatter on tenor and Bill Pinkney on bass, with their doo-wop take on “White Christmas.” The song is nice, but what really makes it is the cartoon that goes with it, created in 2002 by cartoonist and animator Joshua Held.
I’m going to post something about a song from my personal holiday collection every day until December 25. Today’s song came out just last year, but the lyrics will resonate with so many people not seeing family in 2020. “Christmas and You” is from Los Lobos’ first Christmas album, “Llegó Navidad,” or “Christmas is Here.”
Los Lobos members David Hidalgo and Louie Pérez wrote “Christmas and You,” the only original song on “Llegó Navidad.” Thematically, it’s very similar to “Blue Christmas” – being away from someone you love and longing for you to be together. It’s a sad song, but just maybe comforting to know you’re not the only one who feels that way.
Just to prove there are plenty of fun songs on “Llegó Navidad” too, here’s one tune you knew had to be on the record – “Feliz Navidad” – and if you want to hear how I kinda directed a Los Lobos music video in the middle of Walt Disney World, click here for the blog post.
Welcome back to day three of me going through some of the favorite Christmas songs in my collection – and I’ll keep going until December 25. I first bought “An Austin Rhythm and Blues Christmas” on cassette in the mid-80s. As near as I can tell, it’s now out of print, but available for streaming and download, so that’s all you really need.
There’s not a clunker on “An Austin Rhythm and Blues Christmas,” but today, let’s go with The Fabulous Thunderbirds. Remember them? Stevie Ray Vaughn’s older brother, Jimmie, on lead guitar? “Tuff Enuff” was their big hit in 1986.
The T-Birds have two songs on “An Austin Rhythm and Blues Christmas.” The first is “Merry Christmas Darling” – not The Carpenters tune, but a blues cover written by Hop Wilson and Ivory Lee Semiens. My pick though is the second Fabulous Thunderbirds song, the standard “Winter Wonderland.”
Time to talk about another Christmas song, one a day until December 25. “Christmas Must Be Tonight” by The Band is so much better than you’d expect from a song stuck at the end of side one on their 1977 odds-and-ends album, “Islands.” This was their last album for Capitol Records, scraped-together leftovers so the soundtrack for “The Last Waltz” could come out on Warner Brothers.
I’ve got a deep collection of Christmas albums that started around 2005 when I was writing for a website that doesn’t exist anymore. Record companies would send us free copies of new Christmas releases in exchange for reviews. We were always hungry for content, so it was a fair trade. We might have even given “VeggieTales – The Incredible Singing Christmas Tree” an ironic spin.
I’ve added to the collection with my own money each year and I’m going to highlight some of my favorites between now and December 25. Let’s start with a Christmas song that’s huge in the UK – so popular that it comes back onto the charts every year since 2007, but it’s mostly unknown in the US. “I Wish it Could Be Christmas Every Day” was originally released by the glam band Wizzard in 1973.
John Graham is That Guy on TV – an Emmy-winning producer/writer/host and owner of Mosquito County Productions, based in Orlando, FL.
Over the years, John has produced YouTube videos with millions of views, worked with Muppets and Princesses, won two regional Emmys for travel reporting, interviewed celebs from Ariana Grande to Hillbilly Jim, and done thousands of live news broadcasts. (You know it’s me writing this, right?)