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When I Think of Christmas

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Download links and information about When I Think of Christmas by Chris Bennett. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Jazz, Pop, Traditional Pop Music genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 54:27 minutes.

Artist: Chris Bennett
Release date: 2003
Genre: Jazz, Pop, Traditional Pop Music
Tracks: 16
Duration: 54:27
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on iTunes $9.99
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Buy on Amazon $8.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Do You Hear What I Hear? 3:57
2. Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town 2:43
3. Santa Baby 3:25
4. One Small Voice 3:23
5. Last Christmas 3:56
6. A Child Is Born 2:48
7. Christmas Is ... 2:34
8. My Kind of Christmas 3:21
9. It Wouldn't Be Christmas 2:22
10. When I Think of Christmas 2:44
11. Dear Santa Claus 3:50
12. White Christmas 4:41
13. Snowfall 3:33
14. Santa Claus Forgot 2:34
15. Only You Can Make It Christmas 4:04
16. What Are You Doing New Year's Eve? 4:32

Details

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Chris Bennett has never pretended to be someone who sticks to straight-ahead jazz 100 percent of the time; she sings jazz, but she also performs a lot of pop — and for Bennett, pop can mean either adult contemporary or traditional pop of the pre-rock variety. Some jazz enthusiasts wish she would record straight-ahead jazz exclusively, but in fact, Bennett is appealing in both jazz and non-jazz settings. When I Think of Christmas is the Los Angeles resident's first Christmas album, and once you get past the Christmas-oriented lyrics, it is fairly typical of her musical outlook — one that is relevant to jazz as well as pop. Bennett's more jazz-oriented side asserts itself on the familiar "Santa Claus Is Coming to Town," Claude Thornhill's '40s classic "Snowfall" (which receives a bossa nova treatment), and a surprisingly bluesy arrangement of "Do You Hear What I Hear," which alludes to Miles Davis' "All Blues." But there's no getting around the fact that much of the album is straight-up pop, which could be anything from a '40s-like performance of Irving Berlin's "White Christmas" to the adult contemporary approach she favors on the sentimental "It Wouldn't Be Christmas" (a Bennett original). If Bennett feels the need to divide her time between jazz and pop, there is no reason why she shouldn't — as long as she does so tastefully, that is. And even though a few of the tracks are a little too schmaltzy for their own good, When I Think of Christmas is tasteful more often than not and paints a generally likable, if imperfect, picture of Bennett's jazz and non-jazz talents.