The New Zealand Herald

50-yr-old Christmas classic gets a pandemic makeover

Jose Feliciano’s fresh take on seasonal favourite pulls in diverse assortment of artists

- Jamia Pugh

JOSE Feliciano is celebratin­g the 50th anniversar­y of his bilingual Christmas classic Feliz Navidad by releasing a new take featuring Jason Mraz, LinManuel Miranda, Shaggy and more.

Pop balladeer Michael Bolton, Latin boy band CNCO, country duo Big & Rich, and Mexican singer and actress Patricia Manterola are among the 30 acts who teamed up remotely for the reimagined track.

The collaborat­ion of artists from different background­s and musical genres reflects Feliciano’s original goals for the song.

“The idea was to try and unite the people,” the nine-time Grammy winner said. “My thought when I wrote the song was that it didn’t matter what language you were singing in, the feeling of Christmas is privy to all of us.”

The 75-year-old Puerto Rican singer-songwriter says that back in 1970, he never imagined the song’s catchy but minimalist lyrics — just six words in Spanish, 14 in English — would become a holiday standard.

“I would have to say it fulfils a dream,” he said in an interview over Zoom from his home in Connecticu­t. “I had the dream in my mind, but that’s as far as it went until I wrote Feliz Navidad.

He’s been celebratin­g the 50-year anniversar­y on social media by posting vintage photos and memories. The tune has charted on the Billboard Hot 100 repeatedly over the years, and become one of the most played and recorded Christmas songs around the world.

It was part of Feliciano’s 1970 selftitled holiday album, later renamed Feliz Navidad. He says We Three Kings and The First Noel were inspiratio­ns.

“I didn’t want to do a Christmas album that was syrupy,” he said, but one “that really told the story of the Saviour’s birth in a way that was musical and people could get behind.”

A documentar­y about Feliciano, who has been blind since birth, is expected to be released next year. Behind This Guitar tracks his journey from poverty in Puerto Rico and New York to performing at the Vatican’s Christmas celebratio­n.

“The cards that were given to me were not such great cards to deal with,” Feliciano said. “I came from a foreign land, I had no vision, or at least I thought I didn’t — until I found out that I did have a vision and that I saw things the way they should be seen.”

Feliciano is also hosting a concert featuring Feliz Navidad and his versions of other Christmas carols livestream­ed from his Connecticu­t home next month.

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 ?? Photo / AP ?? Jose Feliciano says his Feliz Navidad collaborat­ion reflects his original goals for the song.
Photo / AP Jose Feliciano says his Feliz Navidad collaborat­ion reflects his original goals for the song.

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