Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Every year about this time

he celebrates it with a rhyme

Monday, December 22, 2008

The Krampusse

Every year (usually December 5), Krampusse accompany St. Nicholas and march through towns to reward the good and punish the idle. It is said that children are to say a little prayer and if done poorly, are put into a sack and thrown into a river. Lots of variations in the folklore...

The marching ceremony is still practiced today and features some outstanding costumes...

Krampusse march video clips (look for St. Nicholas):



Saturday, December 20, 2008

The spirit of giving (and those who sold the stuff to give)

Relive the Christmas sale pitches (and the great art that went into it) of yesteryear over at Plan 59

Friday, December 19, 2008

Keep the Bells Ringing

Since we've been heavy on the long time ago, sometimes forgotten and maybe never known bands and their Christmas songs...Here's another. A few years ago it was thought they'd be the next big thing.



Where are they now?

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Power Pop Santa

The Pointed Sticks were formed in 1978 by vocalist Nick Jones, guitarist Bill Napier-Hemy, bassist Tony Bardach and drummer Ian Tiles; keyboard player Gord Nicholl joined later. After releasing several singles and undergoing a number of personnel changes, the band released their debut album, Perfect Youth, in 1980. They disbanded the following year.

The band reformed after a hiatus of twenty-five years to play shows in Japan. They recently played a sold out performance in their hometown of Vancouver, B.C. More shows and recording are planned.


This year they released a Christmas song



You can get a free download of this song and much more info over at the Pointed Sticks website.

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

The Christmas Party

Paul F. Tompkins learns a lesson

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Four calling Birds! Really?

Calling Birds refers to the Four Gospels and/or the Four Evangelists. And in other news the traditions, in Canada at least, came from Dickens.

Canadian Rich Little once did a production of Dickens "A Christmas Carol"

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Christmas Day 3

By the time the Kinks released this song on 1977 punk rock was in full swing. The band proved they could be contemporary with "Father Christmas" with it's loud guitars and cynical, pessimistic attitude that was rampant at the time thanks to unemployment and unrest.



The song wasn't a hit at the time but has become a standard for those into Rock-n-Roll Christmas songs since.

Saturday, December 13, 2008

On the second day of Christmas

Slade never hit it really big in the US but this song is a standard in many other parts of the world.

"Merry Xmas Everybody" is a single by the English glam-rock band Slade. Written by Noddy Holder and Jim Lea, and produced by Chas Chandler, it was the band's sixth and final number one single in the UK. It held the coveted UK Christmas Number One slot in December 1973, beating Wizzard's "I Wish It Could Be Christmas Every Day" into fourth place, and was still number one in mid-January. In fact, it did not leave the top 40 until after Valentine's Day. It is affectionately held in similar regard by UK residents as Bing Crosby's "White Christmas" is by Americans.[1] The song is particularly memorable for frontman Noddy Holder's typically screeching delivery of the line “It's Chriiiiiiist-maaaaaaaaaaas" towards the song's close.

The song is still a regular feature at UK nightclubs around the Christmas season, especially on Christmas Eve where midnight is signalled by Noddy's screeching finale. The song re-entered the UK Top 40 singles chart a further four times - 1981, 1983, 2006, and 2007 - it eventually sold one million copies. There was also a dance remix made by Swedish dance duo Flush that was a UK top 30 entry in 1998. However, the ubiquitity of the song is also the largest source of criticism for the single. In December 2008, the Holiday Inn hotel in Kensington removed Merry Xmas Everybody from the lobby's playlists following "overwhelming" customer feedback that the song was "too irritating".


Slade's frontman Noddy Holden once said of the tune

"I wanted it to be a working-class British Christmas song. And it fitted right with the political and social things going on at the time. It was very grim: there was the Three-Day Week, power cuts at 10 o'clock at night, television finished early because there was no electricity, there was a miners' strike... the whole country was in turmoil. That's why I came up with the line 'Look to the future now It's only just begun.' That's what everybody had to do. The country couldn't have been at a lower ebb. In times like that, people always turn to showbiz."

Fitting for times like now.



Here's Wizzard's "I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday" (the other Christmas song in the UK charts that year).

"I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday" is a popular Christmas song in the UK, first released in 1973 by Wizzard, when it reached #4 in the singles chart, famously beaten to #1 by Slade's "Merry Xmas Everybody" which remained there for five consecutive weeks. As with all Wizzard songs, it was penned and produced by Roy Wood, who played most (if not all) of the instruments too.

The song features the lead vocals of frontman Roy Wood but also contains backing vocals by The Suedettes as well as The Stockland Green Bilateral School First Year, with additional noises being produced by "Miss Snob and Class 3C", as credited on the sleeve.

Many children actually thought that Roy Wood was indeed Santa Claus as he had the white hair and beard in the music video.




A year later Mud topped the UK charts with this song (which also has somehow escaped the US shopping mania psyche)

Written and produced by Nicky Chinn and Mike Chapman, "Lonely This Christmas" was Mud's second number one single in the UK, spending four weeks at the top in December 1974 and January 1975. It was the third number one single that year for the ChinniChap writing and production team, and was performed in the style of Elvis Presley's slower songs from his later career.

Friday, December 12, 2008

Blue Water Beat's 12 Days Of Christmas Day One

Curio's and oddities of the Holiday Season...

On the first day of Christmas my true love gave to me He Man's Holiday Special from 1987 or so