| | |  | Christmas | Home » » Christmas Album | | | | | | | Description: | | This is Neil Diamond's first album of Christmas songs, ranging from "Little Drummer Boy" to "Jingle Bell Rock" and John Lennon's "Happy Christmas (War Is Over)." No Track Information Available Media Type: CD Artist: DIAMOND,NEIL Title: CHRISTMAS ALBUM Street Release Date: 10/01/2000 Domestic Genre: XMAS VOCAL | | | Product Details: | | | Audio CD Release Date:
| September 22, 1992 | | Studio:
| Sony | | Number Of Discs:
| 1 | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 32 reviews |
| | | Track Listing: | | | 1. | O Come, O Come Emmanuel/We Three Kings Of Orient Are | | 2. | Silent Night | | 3. | Little Drummer Boy | | 4. | Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town | | 5. | The Christmas Song | | 6. | Morning Has Broken | | 7. | Happy Christmas (War Is Over) | | 8. | White Christmas | | 9. | God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen | | 10. | Jingle Bell Rock | | 11. | Hark! The Herald Angels Sing | | 12. | Silver Bells | | 13. | You Make It Feel Like Christmas | | 14. | O Holy Night | |
| | | Customer Reviews: | |
Average Customer Review:
( 32 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
9 of 10 found the following review helpful:
One of the best Christmas albums I've ever heardJan 13, 2005
By D. Collier
"Shelf-Help"
And, yes, I've heard quite a few. I don't mind the fact that it's a Jewish man singing Christmas music. And really, why shouldn't a Jewish man sing about the birth of another Jew?
What I like best about this album is that on most of the songs, Neil doesn't jazz it up or anything like that. Now, it's true that he does give that treatment to a few of the songs, but most of them are left intact the way they ought to be. The only ones that experience any major change are "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen" and "White Christmas". His opener, "O Come, O Come, Emmanuel/We Three Kings of Orient Are" is one of the best opening tracks I've ever heard for a Christmas album. It's a beautiful medley complimented with a boys choir.
I highly recommend this CD to any Christmas music enthusiast.
4 of 4 found the following review helpful:
Neil sorta makes it feel like ChristmasNov 30, 2007
By Dave Blanchard Dating probably back to when Irving Berlin wrote "White Christmas," there's been a tradition of popular Jewish artists recording Christmas songs. Having seen his contemporary New Yorkers Paul Simon & Art Garfunkel, Barbra Streisand and Barry Manilow record Christmas songs at various stages in their careers, in 1992 Neil Diamond interrupted his decade-long descent into irrelevant schmaltz by producing this somewhat uneven but overall entertaining collection of holiday music. He wisely begins with "O Come, O Come Emmanuel," with an arrangement a bit reminiscent of "Kol Nidre" from "The Jazz Singer, but that's about the only concession to his Jewish tradition Neil makes on this album. He employs choirs on several of the most spiritual Christmas songs ("We Three Kings," "Silent Night," "Hark the Herald Angels Sing," "O Holy Night"), and for the most part he offers an enthusiastic if not exactly soulful interpretation. He does a really nice number on "Little Drummer Boy," making it sound unlike any other interpretation.
He hits a rough patch with several songs that already have definitive versions and would've been better left alone. Neil comes nowhere remotely close to the raw power of Springsteen's "Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town," and it would've been a much better idea to just have done the traditional Sinatraesque rendition instead. Neil's "Christmas Song" isn't likely to make anybody forget Nat King Cole's classic interpretation. For reasons which boggle the imagination, he then launches into "Morning Has Broken," which isn't even a Christmas song and which was definitively done by Cat Stevens years ago, and then even more amazingly, he tackles John Lennon's "Happy Christmas (War Is Over)."
Neil redeems himself handsomely, though, with a "doo-wop" version of "White Christmas," followed by a barbershop quartet take on "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen." His "Jingle Bell Rock" is okay, too. He launches into a "Crying In Your Pretzels" country twang on "Silver Bells," which if nothing else offers up that classic Neil Diamond cheese we all love, where he stops in the middle of a song to reminisce about those Brooklyn roads he grew up on. The only song on the album, though, that ever gets any airplay these days is the one he'd previously recorded on the "Primitive" album in 1984, "You Make It Feel Like Christmas."
All in all, a decent enough effort, and popular enough that it led to a second volume in 1994, which is not only a much better showcase for Neil's talent, but in fact is one of the best Christmas CDs of the past 20 years.
5 of 6 found the following review helpful:
Neil at his bestDec 11, 2005
By Dolores M. Genna I am a Christian and I'm proud to have a jewish man sing songs about another Jewish man. I've seen Neil Diamond in concert and I must say he puts on a show like no other. I have loved him and his music for many years. I thank him for giving me so much pleasure.
6 of 8 found the following review helpful:
When one hears this, what can one say, but Neil Diamond?Sep 09, 1999
By Trevor Gillespie
"sol_man"
Personally I love this collection of Christmas music. It was the first compilation of Christmas music I bought as a teenager back in 1992. Actually, my mother bought it and we all got hooked on the music. Neil Diamond just has a way of making Christmas music fun and different. Santa Claus is Coming to Town is an upbeat light rocking song, and then there is O Holy Night. That song is awesome. Almost anyone who sings it earns my affection, but Neil does it really well. To sum up: If you're thinking about buying this CD just BUY IT and stop thinking.
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
Exactly what you'd expect from NeilSep 09, 2009
By Peter Durward Harris
"Pete the music fan"
Whatever you think of Neil Diamond, you can't deny his popularity. Critics sometimes used to say that he was predictable, before he teamed up with Rick Rubin a few years ago. Then again, most singers are predictable, not least because the music business doesn't like versatility, which makes life difficult for their marketing departments. So it is that you either like a singer's style, or you don't. Neil offers no real surprises here, the style being exactly what you'd expect pre-Rick Rubin, from the opening medley (O come o come Emmanuel / We three kings) to the closing O holy night. Most of the songs in between are well-loved classics that appear on many Christmas albums. Regardless of whether Neil is predictable or not, there are plenty of people out there who love his music for what it is and I'm one of them.
Neil wrote one song (You make it feel like Christmas) and he also included John Lennon's classic (Happy Xmas war is over) as well as a traditional non-Christmas hymn (Morning has broken), all of them sounding brilliant. Elsewhere, Neil and his arrangers have added a distinctive touch here and there, but never stray far from the standard arrangement. I'm pleased to report that Neil includes the rarely recorded first verse of White Christmas setting the scene in Beverley Hills.
If you enjoy Neil's music, you'll love this album and the sequel (Christmas album volume 2), which follows the same formula, with plenty of famous classics and the occasional less obvious selection.
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