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Track Listing 1. Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas 2. Grown Up Christmas List 3. Winter Wonderland 4. Camouflage And Christmas Lights 5. I'll Be Home For Christmas 6. White Christmas 7. Mary Did You Know 8. Oh Holy Night 9. Presents Under The Tree, The (Better Be For Me) 10. Make it Christmas 11. Presence Of Love
| Details | | Distributor: | n/a | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Personnel: Dean Parks, George Doering (guitar); Matt Rollings (piano); Jimmy Nichols (keyboards); John Wesley Ryles (background vocals). Audio Mixer: John Guess. Recording information: Sound Stage Recording Studios, Nashville, TN; Glenwood Sound Recorders, Burbank, CA; Capitol Studios, Studio A, Hollywood, CA. Photographer: Dean Dixon. Coming from a guy who released an album called MORNING WOOD, a song called "Rhymes with Truck", and has appeared naked as a jaybird on an album cover, one might think MAKE IT CHRISTMAS is a "put the kids to bed affair" with all the breast jokes and beer drinking that usually come with Rodney Carrington. It's anything but as having teenage kids has sent Carrington's moral compass in a completely different direction, one that points to tradition, family values, good will towards man, and comfy sweaters, especially come Christmastime. MAKE IT CHRISTMAS is the country comedian/television star turning Johnny Mathis with his surprisingly good and extremely comfortable voice delivering a mixed-bag of Christmas standards, new holiday music--including Carrington's own "The Presents Under the Tree (Better Be For Me)"--plus a handful of well-chosen, lesser known numbers such as David Foster's "Grown Up Christmas List." While few will be knocked-out by his vocal stylings, what matters here most is his likability and warmth. There is plenty of both, front and center with support from either a lush orchestra or polished studio band lead by producer/arranger Steve Dorff. The bittersweet and poignant "Camouflage and Christmas Lights" is that rare holiday song that speaks directly to military families while the title track asks the age old question of why peace on earth isn't a year-round concern. Peace is the subtle theme of the album, and as Rodney successfully expresses its need and importance throughout.
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