Irish Daily Mail

Which star is going to make it a cool yule?

-

FROM poignant pop to country carols, music’s stars are rocking around the Christmas tree this year with new festive albums. ADRIAN THRILLS sorts the crackers from the turkeys . . .

GWEN STEFANI: You Make It Feel Like Christmas (Interscope)

GWEN STEFANI’S first Christmas album is unashamedl­y romantic. The California­n pop siren’s marriage to Bush singer Gavin Rossdale ended two years ago and she is clearly looking forward to a festive season with new love Blake Shelton.

The pair duet on the title track — a country tune with a Motown backbeat — and Stefani sings her man’s praises again on the Tin Pan Alley pop of My Gift Is You. The six originals here are augmented with covers, including George Michael’s Last Christmas and a giddy Jingle Bells.

TOM CHAPLIN: Twelve Tales Of Christmas (Island)

WITH Keane’s Somewhere Only We Know having been used on one of those popular adverts four years ago, singer Tom Chaplin has already left his stamp on the Christmas market.

This solo effort is dark and wintry, with the melancholy streak at the heart of Keane’s best songs never far from the surface. His choirboy vocals soar on covers of The Pretenders’ 2000 Miles and Joni Mitchell’s River, but it’s his bitterswee­t originals that steal the show here.

Tom pays tribute to lost loved ones on We Remember You This Christmas and demonstrat­es impressive lung power on Under A Million Lights.

LINDSEY STIRLING: Warmer In The Winter (Concord)

A CLASSICAL violinist who became a YouTube phenomenon thanks to her ability to pull off floor-skimming back-bends and moon-walks while playing, Lindsey Stirling hooks up with an array of guests on her first Christmas album.

Latin pop singer Becky Gomez decorates Christmas C’mon, while Disney star Sabrina Carpenter sings You’re A Mean One, Mr Grinch.

SIA: Everyday Is Christmas (Atlantic)

SWAPPING her trademark blackand-white wig for a seasonal green-and-red one, the once-reclusive Sia Furler is coming increasing­ly into the public eye and she is in her element here.

The Australian singer’s forte is the big, emotional ballad and she delivers on the haunting Underneath The Christmas Lights — promising ‘happy presents for all the girls who’ve cried’ — and Snowflake.

Her ten new songs, co-written with customary sidekick Greg Kurstin, also embrace pop and soul with some deliciousl­y dark twists. Comedy number Ho Ho Ho tells of Christmas ‘in the land of misfits’. Another track casts her as the wife of a snowman: ‘I’m Mrs Snow — ’til death we’ll be freezing.’

REBA M ENTIRE: My Kind C Of Christmas (Big Machine)

THE Grand Dame of American country already has two Yuletide albums to her name, but this third effort evokes the fireside feel of her Oklahoman Christmase­s by augmenting her vocals with Catherine Marx’s fluent piano and little else.

The simple arrangemen­ts generally work well. Some of the tunes are as treacly as Christmas pudding, but Dolly Parton’s Hard Candy Christmas has a Seventies singer-songwriter feel, and Silent Night — with Kelly Clarkson and Trisha Yearwood — is a full-blown diva-fest.

CHEAP TRICK: Christmas Christmas (Big Machine)

FOR those who like their Yuletide volume turned up to eleven, veteran American rockers Cheap Trick provide a booming alternativ­e to the traditiona­l carol.

Reiteratin­g singer Robin Zander and guitarist Rick Nielsen’s enthusiasm for British glam, the band supply faithful renditions of Seventies standards by Wizzard and Slade.

But this is a hit-and-miss affair. As they show on Our Father Of Life, Cheap Trick are less convincing when they try to be serious, although their transforma­tion of Silent Night into an over-the-top metal anthem — complete with thundercla­ps and layers of wailing feedback — is hard to better for festive excess.

ELVIS PRESLEY: Christmas With Elvis (Legacy)

ON THE heels of 2015’s If I Can Dream and last year’s The Wonder Of You, this is the third episode of The King with strings — and this time it is Elvis’s seasonal hits that get a makeover courtesy of producer Nick Patrick and the Royal Philharmon­ic Orchestra.

The songs here range from the maudlin (Silver Bells) to the magnificen­t (Blue Christmas), with the new arrangemen­ts elegant without being too intrusive.

SIMON CALLOW: A Christmas Carol (Island)

THESPIAN Callow has written a biography of Charles Dickens and played the author on screen and stage, so his witty and touching reading of A Christmas Carol has a superb natural flow.

The story of miserly Ebenezer Scrooge and his encounters with the ghosts of Christmas was first published 175 years ago, but Callow’s narration, fleshed out by carols played by a Yorkshire brass band, adds fresh nuance to a familiar tale.

MARK FEEHILY: Christmas (Harmoney)

THE BEST singer in Westlife takes us through a heap of hits, including Miss You Most At Christmast­ime and O Holy Night.

Mark has an immense voice and great vocal range which makes this album a delight for the ears, particular­ly for his old fans.

 ??  ?? Wigging out: Australian singer Sia Furler is in a festive mood Gift-wrapped: Gwen Stefani reveals her romantic side
Wigging out: Australian singer Sia Furler is in a festive mood Gift-wrapped: Gwen Stefani reveals her romantic side

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland