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Track Listing DISC 1: 1. Happy Holiday 2. Silent Night - (previously unreleased, first version) 3. Adeste Fideles - (first version) 4. Silent Night 5. White Christmas 6. Adeste Fideles 7. Silent Night 8. God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen 9. I'll Be Home For Christmas 10. Ave Maria 11. White Christmas 12. Silent Night 13. Christmas Song, The (Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire) 14. O Fir Tree Dark 15. First Noel, The 16. You're All I Want For Christmas 17. Christmas Carols: Deck The Halls / Away In A Manger / I Saw Three Ships 18. Christmas Carols: Good King Wenceslas / We Three Kings Of Orient Are / Angels We Have Heard On High 19. Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer 20. That Christmas Feeling 21. Looks Like a Cold, Cold Winter 22. Marshmallow World, A
DISC 2: 1. Christmas in Killarney 2. It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas 3. Sleigh Ride 4. Sleigh Ride Serenade 5. Christmas Is a-Comin' 6. First Snowfall, The 7. Is Christmas Only a Tree 8. I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day 9. Jingle Bells - (with The Andrews Sisters) 10. Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town - (with The Andrews Sisters) 11. Twelve Days of Christmas, The - (with The Andrews Sisters) 12. Here Comes Santa Claus - (with The Andrews Sisters) 13. A Crosby Christmas (Part 1): That Christmas Feeling / I'd Like To Hitch A Ride With Santa Claus 14. A Crosby Christmas (Part 2): The Snowman / That Christmas Feeling / I'd Like To Hitch A Ride With Santa Claus 15. Poppa Santa Claus 16. Mele Kalikimaka 17. Silver Bells 18. Little Jack Frost, Get Lost 19. White Christmas - (with Danny Kaye/Peggy Lee/Truely Stevens) 20. Snow - (with Danny Kaye/Peggy Lee/Truely Stevens) 21. White Christmas - (previously unreleased, alternate take) 22. Let's Start the New Year Right
Album Notes Tracks recorded from 1935 to 1956. Includes liner notes by F.B. (Wig) Wiggins. Digitally emastered by Steven Lasker. If your recollections of Crosby at Christmas are limited to "White Christmas," the official MCA/Decca re-release of THE VOICE OF CHRISTMAS is the place to turn. According to the informative and detailed liner notes provided by F.B. (Wig) Wiggins (who's the American representative of the "International Crosby Circle"), Crosby only agreed to record holiday material (which the singer thought was inappropriate for a popular singer) when Decca agreed in 1935 to donate the proceeds to charity. It will come as a surprise to learn that the recording of "White Christmas" that became a classic was actually Crosby's second version of the chestnut, made in 1947 after the original plates from the 1942 release became worn out. This pair of CDs includes both versions, plus an unreleased 1942 version and a 1954 rendition with Danny Kaye. There are also four versions of "Silent Night," and less religious material like "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" and "Jingle Bells."
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