Tuesday, November 30, 2010

TV Specials 10 - 8

Of the three countdowns we planned to do, the TV special countdown was the smallest in scale and hardest to put together.  All of these TV specials were cornerstones of my holiday viewing schedule, but in the case of some of the specials on the list it has been 10 to 15 years since I have seen them.  All that is a roundabout way of saying that this will be a relatively fuzzy walk down memory lane with the help of lots of Youtube videos and maybe a little Wikipedia as a refresher.

TV Special #10:  A Claymation Christmas (1987)


This just so happens to be one of the holiday specials that I remember the least, save for a few memorable parts.  How could anyone forget about the California Rasins?

"Don't sweat, it's Christmas eve.  Next reindeer's due any minute."



What singing raisins have to do with Christmas is beyond me (outside the possibility of the powerful Grape PAC orchestrating the use of grape related products in TV for increased advertising, I can't even connect this to the commercialization of the holiday), but this clip has some staying power.  Is it the anthropomorphic rasins or the sweet sound of the Temptations?  Who knows, but if this song wasn't already a cornerstone of the TV specials list, it would probably make the top 50 song list.

Will Vinton's Claymation Christmas is a guide to traditional Christmas carols hosted by a pair of dinosaurs, Herb and Rex (again, what do dinosaurs have to do with Christmas?).  The hit on such classics as We Three Kings, Carol of the Bells, and Angels We have Heard on High, all the while struggling with the word "Wassail" until the final scene:



Every December you can find the Rudolph, Peanuts, or Garfield Christmas specials on TV somewhere, but it has been years since I saw Will Vinton's Claymation Christmas on television.  Revisiting it years later (Youtube parts 1, 2, and 3) I can safely say that the holidays are a little better after a round of claymation Christmas carols.

TV Special #9: The Year Without Santa Claus (1974)


The Year Without Santa Claus centers around Santa's decision to take a year off of Christmas, which sets off a chain of events that lands two of his most trusted elves in a southern town and baby reindeer Vixen in the pound (because he was mistaken for a dog).  As most specials go this one has its share of drama and uplift at the end.  However, what most Christmas specials don't have is the Snow Miser, Heat Miser song:



You would be hard pressed to find a better song in any Christmas special out there.  The song is straight big band jazz and one of the coolest things--hottest for the Heat Miser--out there.  These old specials sure did pack a punch in the music department.

TV Special #8: Christmas Eve on Sesame St. (1978)


One of my first memories of any Christmas specials is of this one.  I can remember my parents making a VHS tape of the special for me one year, and then watching it throughout my childhood.  Unfortunately, this is another one of the Christmas specials that I haven't seen in many years.

For the last few years I tried to put my finger on just where I remembered the cast of Sesame St. ice skating to Feliz Navidad, and it was only near the end of compiling this list that I found the answer:



The opening sequence is great.  First a little girl teaches Big Bird to ice skate, followed by one of my favorite scenes of the movie, Burt, Ernie, The Count, and Cookie Monster fooling around on the ice, culminating in a game of "snap the whip" that ends by hurling Oscar the Grouch out of the rink, down a couple flights of stairs and through a wall.  Big Bird comes to comfort Oscar, but is confronted by Oscar's argument that Santa can't fit down a chimney to deliver presents.

What follows are a number of Christmas scenes involving different characters on Sesame St.  Burt and Ernie's plot involves a retelling of the old story Gift of the Magi, Cookie Monster tries to let Santa know what he wants for Christmas, and Oscar professes his disgust for Christmas.

In the end, Big Bird hides out on a rooftop waiting for Santa, but sleeps through the visit.  He goes down to Gordon and Susan's apartment to warm up, only to find that Santa did indeed come and there was nothing to worry about after all.

Monday, November 29, 2010

Introduction and Songs 50 - 46

This is a little holiday project cooked up by a myself and a friend to pass the time and debate some of our favorite Christmas music, movies, and TV specials.  We have spent the last month fleshing out a list of the top 50 Christmas songs, top 15 Christmas movies, and the top 10 TV specials.


New posts will be up each weekday from now until December 24th.


Enjoy.


--


Song # 50: Tom Waits - Christmas Card from a Hooker in Minneapolis





I acknowledge that Tom Waits isn't for everyone, but once you get through the scratchy, and somewhat flat rendition of Silent Night you come to one of Waits better expositional set of lyrics, a Christmas card from a hooker to the father of her unborn child before Christmas.  It is easy to forget now-a-days that Christmas cards carried much more weight in the past than they do in an age of constant connection through phone and internet.  When Waits' hooker sends a Christmas card to a former lover (client?) its a deeply touching and personal account of the hardships that the past year has brought, and quite possibly the only contact she will have with him until next Christmas--or at least until after Valentine's day.  Waits narrates through the past year of this poor womans life, from getting married to a trombone player and cleaning herself up to memories of the hair grease her former lover used to use (breaking into Little Anthony and the Imperials).


Waits has the luxury of being talented and offbeat enough that a Christmas song based on a hooker's correspondence with a former lover is not only accepted as par for the course, but sweet and funny despite the sketchy subject matter.  Waits rolls through a year's worth of pain and suffering with alternating heartbreak and humor before the letter takes an abrupt turn when the narrator admits that she was lying throughout the letter, and she needs money for a lawyer.


It is ann unexpected, yet humorous turn before he launches into a final verse of Silent Night.  Tom Waits wouldn't have it any other way.


Song #49: Charles Brown - Santa's Blues


From one non-traditional Christmas song to another.  In a Christmas music landscape dominated by pop music renditions of traditional songs and way too much adult contemporary, it is nice to take a break and listen to some sweet blues infused Christmas music.


Brown's Santa's Blues is a swinging full band blues piece with just enough lyrics to set up a series of great bluesy solos from the band.  Brown sings two simple little blues verses lamenting the fact that the narrator has been good all year yet his woman still left him, and his one desire is for Santa to send her back to him.  What follows is a series of beautiful solos from a tenor sax, guitar, and piano that really move over the swinging beat of the drums and bass.


The song clocks in at just over three minutes, but that is plenty of respite from a genre that focuses more on pop-music sheen than good ol' soul music.


Song #48: Wham! - Last Christmas





In 1000 years when an futuristic civilization wants to know what the 80's were like during the holiday season, they would be hard pressed to find a more stereotypical representation than the four and a half minute music video for Wham!'s Last Christmas.  This video might be the definitive statement on 80's hair styles and ugly sweaters.


A large group of friends take a cable car up to a mountain retreat for a Christmas celebration.  George Michael is the main focus of the video, and spends his time (other than pretending he isn't gay) longing for the woman he spent the last Christmas with--who is now with another man.  I can tell he is infatuated with her because of the number of heartbroken glances he shoots her as she helps decorate the house, sits next to her new beau during dinner, and also because he sits just beyond a fence looking forlorn as the rest of the gang has a snowball fight.  Apparently music video directors in the 80's wanted to make real sure the audience understood what was going on.  Luckily the video was lo tech enough to be spared some poor animation such as Michael's heart beating out of his chest as his love walked past.

If George Michael were still making music videos today I would like to think he could give Kanye a run for his money in the ridiculously decadent short film department.


Song #47: U2 - Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)





This isn't the best version of Phil Spector's 1963 Christmas hit (more on that later, I assure you), but it is U2 at their Christmas best.  The band does a good job rocking out to Spector's original arrangement and laying down enough backing vocals to give Bono a chance to do what he does best:  take his vocal performance as close to "over the top" as possible.


Despite the unfortunate hat that Bono wears in the video, U2 does the song justice.  Ultimately this performance falls short of the gold standard for this song, but there were few people better at getting the most out of a simple pop song than Phil Spector.


Song #46: Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers - Christmas All Over Again




Unfortunately this song will be the solitary shout out to the best Christmas movie sequel of all time, Home Alone 2 (nudging out  Die Hard 2 and The Santa Claus 2 in the category of the only three Christmas movie sequels I could think of.  If you don't consider Die Hard a Christmas movie, you are crazy).

This is the song that Kevin listens to as he gets on the wrong plane and ends up in New York.  Tom Petty and the gang provide a nice original rocker that I could see myself getting lost in also.

"It's Chrisssssssstmassssssss all ovvvvvverrrrrrrr again."

That seems like as good a place as any to conclude this first day of the countdown.  Stop by in the coming weeks for more music, movies, and TV specials.