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The Carolliers & George Makredes, Christmas Spirit (Anoel, 2002) |
Christmas is a madly successful holiday and has been packing the crowds in, in some form, for at least a couple thousand years. For such a long-lived holiday, it has little variety of tunes -- fewer still if you exclude songs about the Jolly Old Elf. The Carolliers, very much led by George Makredes, try to add some of their own Christmas Spirit to the catalogue, and end up proving how hard it is to craft a classic carol.
This defensive preaching might be more acceptable if the sheer sound of the group was better. The choral teamwork is serviceable, but uninspired. The two solo vocal pieces, "Keep Christmas Through the Year" and "Nativity," far outshine the group efforts. While the music itself is often striking, it's also jarringly out of place with the more casual songs and often too grim for the religious ones. It's not that religious carols can't be wonderful. But successful carols generally have a little more faith, an assumption that the listener is not inimical to their message. The Carolliers' message, as well intentioned as it is, feels like a public service announcement. Combined with weak performance values, the whole album comes off as an amateur fundraiser. If you really want to pay for this sort of music, your donations are welcome by the choir at your local church. - Rambles |