"Christmas?an aspirin for the soul or cold-turkey celebration of the birth and life of Christ? It has to be a measured bit of both, doesn't it?"?Ian Anderson, The Jethro Tull Christmas Album
What a year it's been. We've had kids getting micro-chipped in the  public schools. Congress, the courts and the White House working in  cahoots to erode our privacy rights. The Transportation Security  Administration fumbling its way through national security. Hurricane  Sandy ravaging the Eastern shore. The police state merging with the  surveillance state to keep us tagged, tracked and under control. The  military industrial complex lobbying to keep the nation at war and  defense contractors in the money. Individuals getting fined and arrested  for violating any number of vague and overreaching laws. Homes getting  raided and innocent Americans killed by rampaging SWAT teams armed to  the hilt.
 
 After endless months of being mired in gloom and doom, we now find  ourselves just a few weeks away from Christmas, struggling to latch onto  that spirit of joy, excitement, innocence, magic and hope we had as  children. Even if one is successful in momentarily blocking out the  political gloom and doom, it still takes a monumental effort to get past  the Grinches and Scrooges who can you make you feel like yours is  anything but a wonderful life. And then there's Christmas itself, which  has become embattled in recent years, co-opted by rampant commercialism,  straight-jacketed by political correctness, and denuded of so much of  its loveliness, holiness and mystery.
 
 Despite all of this humbuggery, however, there are still a few steps  you can take to reclaim the magic of Christmas and enjoy the season. For  a start, do something nice for someone else?whether it's a family  member, a neighbor or a stranger on the street. Turn off the news and  turn on a Christmas movie, one of the oldies but goodies?something full  of good will, sweetness and heart. And then, to top it all off, add some  Christmas tunes to the mix, whatever fits the bill for you?be it  traditional carols, rollicking oldies, or some rocking new tunes. What I  love about Christmas music is how the sacred and irreverent meld into  an atmosphere of joy and wonder. Listen to them over dinner, in the car,  on your iPod. Hum them under your breath as you do your shopping. Belt  them out in the shower or while gathered together in a group setting.  Before you know it, you'll start feeling like it's Christmastime again.
 
 Out of the hundreds of Christmas albums I've listened to over the  years, the following are ten of my favorites, covering a broad range of  musical styles, moods and tastes, but each in its own way perfectly  capturing the essence of Christmas.
 
 It's Christmas (EMI, 1989): 18 great songs, ranging from John  Lennon's "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)" to Bing Crosby's "White Christmas."  The real treats on this album are Greg Lake's "I Believe in Father  Christmas," Kate Bush's "December Will Be Magic Again" and Aled Jones'  "Walking in the Air."
 
 Christmas Guitar (Rounder, 1986): 28 beautifully done  traditional Christmas songs by master guitarist John Fahey. Hearing  Fahey's guitar strings plucking out "Joy to the World," "Good King  Wenceslas," "Jolly Old Saint Nicholas," among others, is a sublime  experience.
 
 Christmas Is A Special Day (The Right Stuff, 1993): 12 fine  songs by Fats Domino, the great Fifties rocker, ranging from "Amazing  Grace" to "Jingle Bells." The title song, written by Domino himself, is a  real treat. No one has ever played the piano keys like Fats.
 
 Christmas Island (August/Private Music, 1989): "Frosty the  Snowman" will never sound the same after you hear Leon Redbone and Dr.  John do their duet. Neither will "Christmas Island" or "Toyland" on this  collection of 11 traditional and rather offbeat songs.
 
 A Holiday Celebration (Gold Castle, 1988): The classic folk  trio Peter, Paul & Mary, backed by the New York Choral Society, sing  traditional and nontraditional holiday fare on 12 beautifully  orchestrated songs. Included are "I Wonder as I Wander," "Children Go  Where I Send Thee," and "The Cherry Tree Carol." Also thrown in is Bob  Dylan's "Blowin' in the Wind."
 
 The Christmas Album (Columbia, 1992): Neil Diamond sings 14  songs, ranging from "Silent Night" to "Jingle Bell Rock" to "The  Christmas Song" to "Come, O Come Emmanuel." Diamond also gives us a  great rendition of Lennon's "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)." A delightful  album.
 
 A Charlie Brown Christmas (Fantasy, 1988): 12 traditional  Christmas songs by the Vince Guaraldi Trio. The pianist extraordinaire  and his trio perform "O Tannenbaum," "The Christmas Song" and  "Greensleeves." Also included is the Charlie Brown Christmas theme.
 
 The Jethro Tull Christmas Album (Fuel Records, 2003): If you  like deep-rooted traditional holiday songs, you'll love this album. The  16 songs range from "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen" to Ian Anderson  originals such as "Another Christmas Song" and "Jack Frost and the  Hooded Crow." With Anderson on flute and vocals, this album has an old  world flavor that will have you wanting mince pie and plum pudding.
 
 A Twisted Christmas (Razor Tie, 2006): Twisted Sister, the  heavy metal group, knocks the socks off a bevy of traditional and pop  Christmas songs. Dee Snider's amazing vocals brings to life "Oh Come All  Ye Faithful," "Deck the Halls," "I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus,"  among others?including "Heavy Metal Christmas (The Twelve Days of  Christmas)." Great fun and a great band.
 
 Songs for Christmas (Asthmatic Kitty, 2006): In December 2001,  independent singer/songwriter Sufjan Stevens set out to create a  Christmas gift through songs for his friends and family. It eventually  grew to a 5-CD box set, which includes Stevens' original take on such  standards as "Amazing Grace" and "We Three Kings" and some inventive  yuletide creations of his own. A lot of fun.
 
 One more thing. We must never forget that the Christmas holiday is  named after the Prince of Peace. So in the midst of the giving and the  getting and the making merry, let's not forget to do our part to make  this world a better place for everyone. As John Lennon sings in "Happy  Xmas (War Is Over)":
 
 And so this is Christmas,
 For weak and for strong,
 For rich and the poor ones.
 The road is so long.
 And so happy Christmas
 For black and for white,
 For yellow and red ones.
 Let's stop all the fight.
 
 Merry Christmas, and in the words of Tiny Tim, "God bless us everyone."
 
                                 
       
 


 
 



