Alright, alright. . . we got another thrift store find to dust off and subject to some audio scrutiny.
Album Title: The Gifts of Christmas
Album Artist: Various Artists
So, full disclosure here, I did not just pop this out of the sleeve and throw it on my turntable, folks. I'm not a savage, give me some credit. I picked this one up at the Bethesda thrift store a week or so ago (when I picked up that stack featuring a few of my previously-evaluated selections), and I gave each one of these sons-of-bitches a thorough cleaning on the ol' Spin Clean before dropping a needle onto them. They were pretty gross.
The Wicker Man heralds the beginning of the Apocalypse. |
Maybe the music speaks for itself, so they didn't need to fork out a lot of dough on art direction, I don't know. Let's see who exactly we're dealing with here:
Holy f***ing shit.
This is a Christmas no one alive still remembers. |
You read that right, guys. Percy Faith, Jim Nabors, Mitch Mitchell, Kate Smith. That's like the Four Horseman of the Goodwill Vinyl Apocalypse. I swear to God, if you go into a thrift store trying to find a diamond LP in the rough that is their moldy-smelling vinyl offerings, you're going to find each and every one of these assholes highly represented. Wedged right in there among the Mantovani records, polka collections, church recordings, Mills Brothers, Lawrence Welk. . . you see where I'm goin' with this.
Well, these guys straight-up carpet bomb this album with shittiness. I honestly can't see which one of these assholes I hate the most, they all sound like people pretending to sing. Like, karaoke singing, if you will. The arrangements themselves are of the Great Songs of Christmas variety, but lacking the Frank Sinatra and Julie Andrews talent that makes those compilations, while boring in their own right, at least somewhat palatable.
No, 70% of this album is pure garbage. Like, 2/10 on the ol' Odyssey Rating Scale of mine, that's what we're dealing with here.
But, then we have a couple rare glimpses of hope pop up from time to time. A choir/instrumental medley on the third track of Side A isn't half-bad - if anything, it's generic background Christmas music. Alas, when compared to the rest of the crap on this album, it shines like a frickin' star.
Then, you have Johnny Cash with a track on here ('I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day'), and while it's not necessarily great (because, as I've said before, his Christmas songs rarely are), it's still Johnny frickin' Cash, and the man's mere presence on this record is enough to drag this sludge-fest up a point on its own. Aside from him, there's a pretty soulful track from Mahalia Jackson (not sure if she's any relation to the dead child molester), who belts out a Southern Gospel-styled rendition of 'Go Tell It on the Mountain' that is way better than it should be, and, as such, stands out on this album like a sore thumb.
So, needless to say, consistency is definitely not this album's strong suit. Honestly, I don't think it has one at all. A dusting of songs on here are decent, most of the album is bottom-shelf, thrift store fare, and the arrangement styles are all over the damn place. The only people who would possibly like this horrible, horrible collection are elderly people who shop daily at thrift stores, and who actually like artists like Percy Faith, Jim Nabors, Kate Smith, and Mitch Mitchell.
All the more reason for me to return this as soon as possible. After all, there might be elderly women waddling about Salvation Army as we speak, looking for Christmas records to liven up the Hi-Fi's in their crotchet-covered living rooms. And Christmas is a time for giving, America.
VERDICT: 4/10 - Boraphyll (A parade of Goodwill heavyweights let loose in all their shittiness, and not even Johnny Cash is enough to salvage this boring record from the dusty, mothball Hell from whence it came. . . and to where it'll be returning very shortly.)
- SHELVED -
- Brian
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