A Christmas Gift For You
2006
For a brief time, I'm offering free MP3's of a five treasures from my voluminous collection - songs I love and that I'm confident you can't find easily at any store. These are relatively lo-fi files, so no one should get too upset (we hope) at this petty larceny. Click on the pictures, song titles, or MP3 links to get your Christmas off to a rockin' start! Like Phil Spector, I'm pleased to offer this Christmas gift for you.
Randy Anthony
Marshall
Crenshaw, "Sock It To Me Santa" (1996)
This singer/songwriter, perhaps, needs no introduction as a longtime power pop and roots rock favorite.
His debut
album, in particular, is a widely acknowledged classic. But, when he visited Christmasland, the tuneful Mr.
Crenshaw chose to cover "Sock It To Me Santa," a James Brown-style rave-up Bob Seger waxed for Cameo Records way back in 1967.
Crenshaw's version (backed by Detroit's hard-rocking Chisel Brothers) is a faithfully funky, guitar-driven
take that nearly matches the fire of Seger's incendiary
original (available on Rock
'n' Roll Christmas).
Crenshaw recorded the song in 1996 for a local Detroit benefit album called A Little Holiday Spark, and then he contributed it the following year to a more widely distributed benefit album, Home
For
The
Holidays. Though it includes a few more gems (especially Redd Kross' "Mary Christmas"), Home
For
The
Holidays, like most benefit albums, is a mixed-bag. Crenshaw's cut, is worth rescuing, and
since it has never appeared elsewhere, here
you
go...
MP3,
2.3 MB (ripped from CD)
Screaming
Santas, "I Love Xmas” (1995)
The fertile northwest Pacific rock scene is best known for giving birth to grunge - loud, dense sounds
from bands like Nirvana,
Mudhoney, and Soundgarden. But, pop exists up there, too, and Seattle's Posies
are perhaps the premiere power pop band of the 90's. In 1995, Posies' auteur Jon Auer
joined forces with some fellow Emerald City popsters (Super Deluxe's Braden Blake and Christopher Lockwood)
to
form
the
Screaming Santas; drummer Mike Musburger, by the way, had played in both bands. Anyway, the collaboration
produced
a terrific
4-song
EP
called Trim
The
Tree! featuring a slamming cover of Big Star's "Jesus Christ" and an original corker called "I
Love
Xmas."
That song was also released as a white vinyl 7-inch b/w "(Let's Get
High) For Christmas," but none of the four tracks have ever been licensed for subsequent
release.
MP3, 2.8 MB (ripped from CD)
Three Courgettes, "Christmas
Is Coming" (1982)
This British vocal trio recorded just a handful of tracks for Island Records, including a picture-disc single
(pictured) conveniently called "Three
Courgettes" (1982). The group consisted of Michael Parker, Jerry Kreeger, and Barb
Jungr, who continues to perform on the European cabaret circuit. They toured with Island acts like
Kid Creole and the Coconuts and contributed
a solitary cut to the second edition of A Christmas Record,
a "no wave" compendium on Michael Zilkha's Island-distributed ZE Records.
It's a classic album (and a great song), but when it was finally reissued on CD, the Courgettes' moody,
sophisticated gem got left off. Ergo, I present it for you here....
MP3,
3.2 MB (ripped from vinyl)
Dada, "My
Baby Fell For Ol' St. Nick" (1993)
Though they are still cranking out alternative rock
(dude), Dada will forever be remembered for their radio hit, "Dizz Knee Land," from their 1992
debut
album, Puzzle.
"My Baby Fell For Ol' St. Nick" was released to radio the next Christmas on a strictly promotional
basis,
though
it later showed up Christmas
Twist, a disc sold exclusively in Pier One stores in 2000. In 2003, Gurley included the original
Dada recording on his self-released CD, I Ain't Gonna
Sit On Santa's Lap. Anyway, "My Baby Fell For
Ol' St. Nick" is a minor classic, a droll,
jazz-tinged,
acoustic blues that succeeds
largely due to singer/songwriter Michael Gurley's
understated reading on a now-familiar
theme - Santa as sexual predator. "His big white bag of toys just left me blues to play," Gurley
moans,
concluding "Perhaps I'm not the jolly type."
MP3, 2.9 MB (ripped from CD)
Hank
Snow, "Reindeer Boogie" (1953)
One of the CD's I often get asked about is Rhino's Hillbilly
Holiday (1988), a long out-of-print collection of hard-core country gems. First of all, no I won't
sell my copy, so stop asking. Second, here's a free shot at one of the best, hardest-to-find cuts: Hank
Snow's super-charged "Reindeer Boogie." Snow's singular classic contrasts mightily with contemporary
records like "Gene Autry's "Here Come's Santa Claus." Both were modern compositions, to
be sure, but
"Reindeer
Boogie" sought to explode traditions, not uphold them. "Santa had a cup of coffee," the
Singing Ranger
explains, and soon enough those reindeer are hoofing like hepcats. The
song
was
released
both
as
a
single
and
as
part
of a 4-song,
7-inch
EP packaged in a die-cut, ornament-shaped sleeve (pictured). Sadly, many of the cuts from Hillbilly
Holiday remain rare despite the zillions of country-themed Christmas CD's that have since flooded
the
market, and used copies often fetch $50 or more.
Worth every penny....
MP3, 2.2 MB (ripped from CD)