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REVIEW
Music Review: Blackmore's Night - Winter Carols
Written by Anna Creech
Published December 07, 2006
In the late 1990s, British rocker Ritchie Blackmore decided he wanted
to create a Renaissance rock band. Along with his fiancée,
vocalist and songwriter Candice Night, he recruited a band of talented
musicians from around the world. The end result is the creatively
named Blackmore's Night, and they have recently released their eighth
album, Winter
Carols.
The album is
a mix of traditional Christmas hymns and carols, with a few other
seasonal tunes thrown in. For example, the Hanukkah song "Ma-O-Tzur"
makes an appearance, as well as the non-seasonal but still appropriate
"Lord of the Dance/Simple Gifts." I think the instrumental
"Winter (Basse Dance)" is a Blackmore's Night original,
along with "Wish You Were Here" and "Christmas
Eve."
"Hark the
Herald Angels Sing/Come All Ye Faithful" opens the album with
a fairly traditional orchestral production of the first tune and
features Night's dulcet vocals. Blackmore comes in after the first
verse and chorus with a classic rock electric guitar solo that leads
into the second tune. The rendition of "Come All Ye Faithful"
is given more of a classic rock treatment than "Hark,"
including plenty of keyboard flourishes and a driving rhythm.
"I Saw
Three Ships" drops the classic rock element entirely and is
presented in a Renaissance style. Following this is the "Winter
(Basse Dance)" instrumental, which is performed on an acoustic
guitar with a hint of orchestral strings and flute in the background.
The next few songs are given much the same treatment, and it is
not until the last few songs that the wailing of an electric guitar
is heard again, and even then it's only there to add a bit of texture
to "Wish You Were Here" and lead the song out.
I highly recommend
adding Winter Carols to your Christmas music collection. It is a
pleasant change from the cheesy grocery store checkout lane selections
and mall muzak that consumers are subjected to every year, and it
will fit in nicely with your more traditional Christmas albums.
I know my copy is going into the five disc shuffle along side albums
from Kim Robertson, Kathy Mattea, Amy Grant, Anonymous 4, and the
Mormon Tabernacle Choir.
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