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HOLIDAY SONG COUNTDOWN – DEC. 17

“DOMINICK THE DONKEY” – 8 DAYS UNTIL CHRISTMAS

We’re about at the seventh inning of the countdown – or the seventh-inning stretch, if you will.

Which makes this song appropriate, at least if you’re a New York Met fan.

Lou Monte is perhaps best known for his rendition of “Lazy Mary,” the Sicilian song that plays at Citi Field after “Take Me Out to the Ballgame.”

But Monte’s holiday epic is “Dominick the Donkey,” a spirited romp with a hero better equipped than reindeer to handle the hills of Italy. 

The idea that he’s delivering an item of clothing made in “Brook-a-leen” is quaint at a time when it’s more likely to have been made in Burkina Faso.

The video is good if you’d like to sing along.

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HOLIDAY SONG COUNTDOWN – DEC. 16

“MELE KALIKIMAKA” – 9 DAYS TO CHRISTMAS

It was my pleasure to spend the much of the past week in Maui. Where, believe it or not, it is also Christmas time.

The reason you might not believe it is that it’s nothing near cold there. We were walking by the beach in T-shirts, shorts and flip-flops while it was 19 degrees at home.

But there are decorations – below is a picture of the Christmas tree just after sunset outside the restaurant where we had dinner. 

And there is music. It should not surprise anyone that the one song we heard play most in the seven December days we were there was “Mele Kalikimaka.” It was written by R. Alex Anderson, who was born in Hawaii. Bing Crosby popularized it in 1950.

Because it’s in English – other than the words “Mele Kalikimaka,” which mean Merry Christmas – it’s not considered traditional Hawaiian music. But it’s fun to hear Hawaiian musicians play it in Hawaii.

Unfortunately, there are few versions online, but this video by Josh Tatofi is most reminiscent of what I heard during a glorious week in paradise.

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HOLIDAY SONG COUNTDOWN – DEC. 15

“DO YOU HEAR WHAT I HEAR?” – 10 DAYS UNTIL CHRISTMAS

Peace is a common theme of the holiday season. But it seems unusual that holiday songs would make a political statement about it.

Introducing “Do You Hear What I Hear?”

Yeah, I know, it doesn’t seem like it has a message other than the more obvious one about the holiday. The night wind. The little lamb. The shepherd boy. And so on.

But the song was written by a married couple in 1962 as the Cuban Missile Crisis was unfolding. Those of us old enough remember that as a very scary moment in our lives. The composers were scared, too, and they wrote this as a plea to end the tension.

Bing Crosby popularized the song. It was originally recorded by the Harry Simeone Chorale of “The Little Drummer Boy” fame. Here is their version:

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HOLIDAY SONG COUNTDOWN – DEC. 14

“DING DONG MERRILY ON HIGH” – 11 DAYS TO CHRISTMAS

This song has a dual origin. The melody was written in the 16th century by French composer Thoinot Arbeau – it was the rave of its time, used for secular dancing events when they were finished making mustard in his birthplace, Dijon.

But the lyrics – the “Ding Dong Merrily on High” part – were written in the 1920s by one of those three-name British guys, George Ratcliffe Woodward. He specialized in taking old Renaissance melodies and giving them a modern – for the time, anyway – spin.

It’s a festive song and seems as though it should be performed by choirs. Here’s a version by the Atlanta Master Chorale.

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HOLIDAY SONG COUNTDOWN – DEC. 13

“COOLER THAN SANTA CLAUS” – 12 DAYS TO CHRISTMAS

Morris Day turns 67 today – which is why this song seems appropriate.

In the movie “Purple Rain,” Day is the flamboyant rival who wants to replace Prince as the main act at the clubs First Avenue and 7th St. Entry.

That persona comes through in this wonderful holiday song he recorded four years ago. I don’t spend a lot of time monitoring contemporary music, so I don’t know if “Cooler Than Santa Claus” is particularly popular.

It should be. The music video is fun to watch. And if it feels as though there aren’t a lot of different lyrics, there are more than in “Felix Navidad.”

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HOLIDAY SONG COUNTDOWN – DEC. 12

“THE COVENTRY CAROL” – 13 DAYS TO CHRISTMAS

This is a really pretty old English carol. But its sweetness belies its depressing message.

The song was part of a Christmas pageant performed in Coventry as far back as the late 16th century. This part, best known for its “Lullay, lullay” line, is meant to be a lullaby sung by mothers whose sons were ordered to be slaughtered by King Herod in his hunt for the baby Jesus.

This makes “Christmas with the Devil” seem like wholesome fun.

Annie Lennox recorded it for a holiday album in 2010. Here she is performing it at the Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree Lighting.

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HOLIDAY SONG COUNTDOWN – DEC. 11

“COOL YULE” – 14 DAYS TO CHRISTMAS

The Louis Armstrong recording of this song might be one of the four or five holiday works that I’ll stop what I’m doing and listen – even though I’ve heard it hundreds of times.

The song itself is pretty good. It was written by Steve Allen, the first-ever host of “The Tonight Show.” While better known as a comedian, Allen claims to have written 8,500 songs, few of them recorded. The most famous is “This Could Be the Start of Something Big,” an early ’60s crooner standard.

What makes this recording is Armstrong. The arrangement, with his band, The Commanders. Armstrong’s vocals invoke the joy of the song and his trumpet solo brings it to an emotional peak.

“Cool Yule” has been covered several times and the versions aren’t bad. But this one is definitive. It would be wrong not to link to Corona’s own.

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HOLIDAY SONG COUNTDOWN – DEC. 10

“CONCERTO GROSSO –  in G minor, Opus 6, No. 8” – 15 DAYS TO CHRISTMAS

My favorite classical holiday work isn’t Handel’s “Messiah” or the previously mentioned “Christmas Oratorio” by Bach.

It’s this, perhaps the best-known but hardly the only work by Italian composer Arcangelo Corelli. He was an accomplished violinist in the late 17th and early 18th century and he composed several almost-revolutionary classical pieces. He influenced Bach among others, as he was renowned throughout Europe.

I love this part of the concerto because it summons the majesty of the holiday. It seems joyful and respectful.

And he’s Italian.

Here’s the Christmas Concerto performed by a chamber ensemble of the Frankfurt Radio Symphony: 

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HOLIDAY SONG COUNTDOWN – DEC. 9

“CHRISTMAS DOWN IN COOPERSTOWN” – 16 DAYS TO CHRISTMAS

Baseball and holiday music are both obsessions of mine. So I’ve spent a lot of time wondering if there is something that shares both my passions.

That would be “Christmas Down in Cooperstown,” a song written and performed by Dana Cooke. It’s the one song we know he’s performed, appearing on an album of baseball music sold at the Hall of Fame and showing up on a Syracuse radio morning show.

The song isn’t half bad. It has a certain wistfulness that, if you’ve ever been to the Baseball Hall of Fame, seems appropriate.

Can’t find anything else Cooke has done – a website supposedly his doesn’t come up. So if this is his one and only work, it’s a masterpiece.

How appropriate this is as Mets fans celebrate their future Hall of Famer, Juan Soto.

https://hungryformusic.bandcamp.com/track/christmas-down-in-cooperstown

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HOLIDAY SONG COUNTDOWN – DEC. 8

“CHRISTMAS WRAPPING” – 17 DAYS UNTIL CHRISTMAS

A lot of people hate this.

Some think it’s a little overplayed, which is probably true of everything in the holiday canon. 

Others are bothered by the storyline. This young woman seems superficial to some. And, of course, that “happy ending” thing is seen as suggestive.

The question of whether a song itself is good or bad meets a test when someone other than the original artist – in this case, The Waitresses – performs it.

So here’s Kylie Minogue to test whether you like or hate the song or the recording.

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