![Mariah Carey, Merry Christmas [📷 : Sony Legacy]](https://themusicalhype.com/wp-content/plugins/accelerated-mobile-pages/images/SD-default-image.png)
![Mariah Carey, Merry Christmas [📷 : Sony Legacy]](https://i0.wp.com/themusicalhype.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/mariah-carey-merry-christmas-sony-legacy.jpg?resize=400%2C400&ssl=1)
Mariah Carey still lays claim to one of the most popular, crowd-pleasing Christmas albums of all time with 1994’s Merry Christmas.
![Mariah Carey, Merry Christmas [📷 : Sony Legacy]](https://themusicalhype.com/wp-content/plugins/accelerated-mobile-pages/images/SD-default-image.png)
![Mariah Carey, Merry Christmas [📷 : Sony Legacy]](https://i0.wp.com/themusicalhype.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/mariah-carey-merry-christmas-sony-legacy.jpg?resize=400%2C400&ssl=1)
T
here’s one thing for sure, 🎙 Mariah Carey and Christmas go together perfectly, PERIOD. How so? Well, Carey has long reigned supreme when it comes to festive music, with her 1994 album, 💿 Merry Christmas, being “kind of a big deal.” We all know that 🎵 “All I Want for Christmas is You” is the biggest attraction, earning the distinction as one of the rare holiday songs hitting no. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. While “All I Want for Christmas is You” is the crowning achievement from Merry Christmas, the entire album is incredibly enjoyable, with no shortage of hits I find myself repeatedly playing year after year. Why not celebrate this timeless album with a retrospective album review!“Silent Night”
“I just want you for my own (Ooh)
More than you could ever know (Ooh)
Make my wish come true
All I want for Christmas is you
You, baby.”
It takes a big voice to deliver this the definitive holiday classic, 🎵 “O Holy Night.” Not everybody can sing “O Holy Night” – perhaps the biggest understatement ever. Ever heard a church choir butcher this gorgeous record at Christmastime? I have and it’s NOT music to the ears. The good news, of course, is that Mariah Carey is no ordinary musician – she’s extraordinary darling! Simply put, she nails “O Holy Night,” flaunting her anointed pipes with those soulful ad-libs and that range! Sickening approaching 30 years after its release.
“Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)”
Following another sacred carol, Carey opts for a lighthearted, retro- soul holiday classic in 🎵 “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home).” The 🎙 Darlene Love version is the definitive, beloved take – we all know this! That said, Carey slays on this remake, particularly those upper register runs that take immense skill to execute. She slackens the pace, opting for balladry on 🎵 “Miss You Most (At Christmas Time),” the second original from Merry Christmas. “Miss You Most (At Christmas Time)” plays to Carey’s strengths – she does what she does well. Still, “Miss You Most” is clearly second fiddle (at best) to the definitive original (🎵 “All I Want for Christmas is You”), and I’d even argue I prefer sacred original “Jesus Born on This Day”. Still, you can’t listen to “Miss You Most (At Christmas Time)” and NOT get the feels. Love is perfect fuel for the fire in so many situations.
“Oh, Jesus, born on this day
He is our light and salvation
Oh, Jesus, born on this day
He is the King of all nations.”
“Santa Claus is Comin’ to Town”
With sacred carol “Joy to the World,” Carey successfully livened it up. She balanced the liveliness of “Joy” with the laudatory, sacred original “Jesus Born on This Day” which is slower and more reverent. Fittingly, it’s time to have some fun again with the ‘never gets old’ secular classic, 🎵 “Santa Claus is Comin’ to Town.” “Santa Claus is Comin’ to Town” sounds novel in Carey’s hands (as it should), blending the soulfulness of the Jackson 5 rendition, and the glorious vibes of the retro-pop of the 1950s and 60s. The vocals and the energy are electric. Dipping back into sacred music, Carey combines two classics into one on 🎵 “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing / Gloria (In Excelsis Deo).” The fusion works well thanks to a great arrangement and production, the warm, spiritually charged choir, and of course, Carey in the lead role.
“Jesus, Jesus
Oh, what a wonderful child
Jesus, Jesus
So lowly, meek, and mild
New life, new hope, new joy He brings
Won’t you listen to the angels sing
Glory, glory, glory
To the newborn King
Jesus, Jesus.”
“Jesus Oh What a Wonderful Child” celebrates the birth of Jesus. Also, by hailing “the newborn King,” the record alludes to the marvelous and miraculous things he’d come to do. Carey sings the lead commandingly, making you feel the sheer awesomeness of the birth of Christ. She exhibits her usual finesse, but she also gets ‘rough’ with it! One of the biggest surprises of the Carey performance is the double-time breakdown section, which transforms the song to the feel of Pentecostal service. The riffs by Carey are on-point, and listening, it’s hard NOT to catch the spirit (or some semblance of it)!
Final Thoughts 💭
✅ Gems 💎: “Silent Night,” “All I Want For Christmas is You,” “Joy to the World,” “Jesus Born on This Day” & “Jesus Oh What a Wonderful Child”
🎙 Mariah Carey • 💿 Merry Christmas • 🏷 Sony • 🗓 1994
[📷: Sony]
Leave a Comment