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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The classic "Christmas Album" by Amy Grant from 1983
The idea that Amy Grant could put out a great Christmas album is hardly surprising, but the fact that she had a hand in writing four of the songs on this classic 1983 collection should raise some eyebrows. The scope of "A Christmas Album" is laid out in the first three tracks: "Tennessee Christmas," the first of the songs co-written by Grant, the...
Published on November 23, 2003 by Lawrance M. Bernabo

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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Amy Grant's freshman Christmas effort quite good
This is the first, chronologically, of three Amy Grant Christmas albums. Each subsequent album is better than the one before. Highlights of this album, for me, are her cover of Michael W. Smith's rather sparse "Emmanuel" and a new musical setting of the lyrics for "O Little Town of Bethlehem" - very fresh and somewhat exhilirating. I also enjoy the lovely "Tennesse...
Published on December 16, 2008 by Robert W. Stone


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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The classic "Christmas Album" by Amy Grant from 1983, November 23, 2003
This review is from: A Christmas Album (Audio CD)
The idea that Amy Grant could put out a great Christmas album is hardly surprising, but the fact that she had a hand in writing four of the songs on this classic 1983 collection should raise some eyebrows. The scope of "A Christmas Album" is laid out in the first three tracks: "Tennessee Christmas," the first of the songs co-written by Grant, the traditional Mendelssohn hymn "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing," and a German carol "Preiset Dem König!" This album was released when Grant was pretty much at her height as a contemporary Christian singer, having won a Grammy for gospel singing the previous year, and that may well explain this rather ambitious album. But you would have to believe that Grant was going to be able to record anything she wants, which makes the eleven tracks she selected all the more interesting.

The other original songs are "Christmas Hymn," "Love Has Come," and "Heirlooms," which blend in just as well with the contemporary Christmas classics "Sleigh Ride" and "The Christmas Song." But the definitive song on this Christmas album is the last track, when Grant pulls out all the stops for an impressive medley of "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God" and "Angels We Have Heard on High," supported by the Hollywood Presbyterian Choir. Having more sedate Christmas songs preceding this finale only makes it a more powerful conclusion to the album. I did a quick check through my Christmas albums and Amy Grant's "A Christmas Album" has more original songs, songs that I have never heard, or songs that do not appear on any other holiday, of any holiday album that I have. If you have not picked up this Christmas album in the twenty years since it was first released, then now would be a good time to add this classic to your music library.

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I LOVE this Christmas Album!, January 9, 2007
This review is from: A Christmas Album (Audio CD)
I grew up listening to this album and I never get tired of it year after year. It's always the first one I play when Christmastime rolls around.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Amy Grant's first classic "Christmas Album", November 26, 2003
This review is from: Christmas Album (Audio CD)
The idea that Amy Grant could put out a great Christmas album is hardly surprising, but the fact that she had a hand in writing four of the songs on this classic 1983 collection should raise some eyebrows. The scope of "A Christmas Album" is laid out in the first three tracks: "Tennessee Christmas," the first of the songs co-written by Grant, the traditional Mendelssohn hymn "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing," and a German carol "Preiset Dem König!" This album was released when Grant was pretty much at her height as a contemporary Christian singer, having won a Grammy for gospel singing the previous year, and that may well explain this rather ambitious album. But you would have to believe that Grant was going to be able to record anything she wants, which makes the eleven tracks she selected all the more interesting.

The other original songs are "Christmas Hymn," "Love Has Come," and "Heirlooms," which blend in just as well with the contemporary Christmas classics "Sleigh Ride" and "The Christmas Song." But the definitive song on this Christmas album is the last track, when Grant pulls out all the stops for an impressive medley of "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God" and "Angels We Have Heard on High," supported by the Hollywood Presbyterian Choir. Having more sedate Christmas songs preceding this finale only makes it a more powerful conclusion to the album. I did a quick check through my Christmas albums and Amy Grant's "A Christmas Album" has more original songs, songs that I have never heard, or songs that do not appear on any other holiday, of any holiday album that I have. If you have not picked up this Christmas album in the twenty years since it was first released, then now would be a good time to add this classic to your music library.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It's Not Christmas Without This One, December 15, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: A Christmas Album (Audio CD)
Everyone has their all-time favorite Christmas discs and this is in the top few around our house, and has been since its release on vinyl. Though I'm hardly in Ms. Grant's target demographic (as a 51-year-old male), I've followed her music since she was a teen and this in my opinion is one of her finest and most substantial efforts -- better, I feel, than "Home for Christmas," her second Christmas disc which seems belabored and pretentious by comparison. The winsome "Tennessee Christmas" with husband Gary Chapman is as homey as smoke up the chimney, while her interpretations and adaptations of traditional numbers are fresh and inspiring. Her Christian faith shines through while not obscuring the fun and frivolity of secular numbers like "Sleigh Ride." A suggestion: use this fine disc as a warmup and then settle in for a transcendant experience with Kathy Mattea's "Good News," a double helping of deeply-satisfying seasonal soul food.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Christmas Classic from Amy, December 14, 2004
By 
John Cannon (Chesterfield, MO United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Christmas Album (Audio CD)
I remember when this Christmas LP first came out in 1983. I had only recently discovered 'Contemporary Christian' music and had been an Amy Grant fan for about a year. To this day, I consider this the BEST Christmas LP recorded in the last quarter-century. Recorded between 'Age to Age' and 'Straight Ahead,' this LP offers Amy, I feel, at the peak of her most creative and enjoyable period (early 1980's). This was during the time that contemporary Christian music was just about to seriously escalate in popularity - and Amy, among others, was leading the way. The songs are well crafted and a fine mix of old/new and secular/sacred. The newer songs have become classics, recorded by many other performers. Amy was blessed with an excellent producer, wonderful songwriters and was 'at the right place at the right time.' She, obviously, struck a chord with the Christmas album since she's recorded two seasonal albums since. Although these are fine collections in their own right, neither matches the magic of this initial holiday offering.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars amy grant, February 17, 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: A Christmas Album (Audio CD)
This is the best Christmas album EVER! it instanty puts u in the Christmas Spirit! I LOVE AMY GRANT!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A moment of magic in Grant's career, November 8, 2002
This review is from: A Christmas Album (Audio CD)
I have enjoyed this album since its arrival in 1983. It seems to capture a highlight in Grant's career--excellent song choices, and a point where her voice was in many ways at its peak. There are a few moments, let's be frank, where Grant's untrained vocal range is stretched to its limits by this challenging material ("Love Has Come," "Angels We Have Heard on High," and "Christmas Hymn") . Still, her voice from this time has a clarity and earnestness that carries the album with great energy, and even more, great fun that creeps into even the most solemn songs. The "yoo-hoo!" on "Sleigh Ride," while arguably a bit goofy and over the top, always brings a smile to my face. And I love the power of the "Emmanuel" and "Little Town" medley, as well as the innocent torchiness that she displays on "Chestnuts." Finally, the orchestrations and instrumentation are just right. Great blending of new and traditional material, a great performance by Amy, and a little magic make this album a wonderful holiday perennial. I believe it is still the best of her three Christmas collections! I have owned the LP and the cassette, and now I plan to get the CD as well. And that by itself speaks volumes to how much I have enjoyed "A Christmas Album."
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Perennial Favorite That Pointed Grant in Pop/Rock Direction, January 29, 2007
By 
Chip Webb (Fairfax Station, VA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Christmas Album (Audio CD)
In the spring of 1982, around the time that her soon-to-be widely successful album Age to Age was released, Amy Grant was asked whether she would be interested in crossing over from the contemporary Christian music (CCM) market to a more mainstream market. She responded in the affirmative. Her next release was A Christmas Album in the fall of 1983. Grant has said in interviews over the years that she wanted this album to quell the high expectations raised by her considerable recent success. But whatever her intentions might have been, the album actually did the opposite: it increased her fan base and carried her farther down a pop/rock path that would a mere year-and-a-half later culminate in her first dual release (1985's Unguarded) to the secular pop/contemporary Christian market.

For a holiday release, A Christmas Album is a remarkably excellent album. The formula used by Grant and producer Brown Bannister is nothing new: stir in new tunes with the expected traditional favorites and include a few instrumentals. With the holiday classics (both religious and secular), Grant provides renditions respectful of the originals while often adding her own twists to the proceedings. This in itself fit well with the CCM target audience's worship practices of the time. During the 1980s and into the 1990s, it was standard (in larger evangelical churches, at least) to take traditional hymns or songs and embellish them with brassy orchestras, large choirs, and, often, more contemporary vocals and arrangements.

But even in following this trend, Grant's versions are of markedly higher quality than what you'd normally find on a CCM album of the time. She stretches her voice on "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing" and "Angels We Have Heard on High" and towers over the voices of the choir that backs her. She includes a new song from her own pen, "Christmas Hymn," that aims to become a Christmas standard of its own. This "hymn" is the best track on the album and has been picked up by some churches as part of their worship. (A second new Christian song, "Heirlooms," is pleasant enough but not as memorable.)

Grant's versions of secular Christmas songs like "Sleigh Ride" and "The Christmas Song (Chestnuts)" not only serve as tributes to the original recordings but also bring a sense of fun to the album. In the same vein, Grant's collaboration with then-husband Gary Chapman, "Tennessee Christmas," is as all-American as the previous tunes. When you factor in the album's cover snow scenes and interior photo of Grant's extended family gathering, it's not that much of a stretch to say that Grant comes across here as all American as the individuals in a Norman Rockwell painting.

If the album had just been composed of Christmas standards and new tunes in the traditional mode, it undoubtedly would have succeeded in Grant's goal of deflating expectations. Bannister and Grant also, though, have planted a few left turns in the album. The most obvious one is Michael W. Smith's "Emmanuel," a song that, despite its name, is not specifically Christmas-oriented. (Smith stole the lyrics from a top-selling poster of the names of Christ.) Sandwiched between traditional hymns, "Emmanuel" begins with heavy synthesizers and quickly expands into a full-blown pop/rock tune. It quickly became a CCM hit single and remained a concert standard for some time after Grant "crossed over" into the secular market. The second pop song, "Love Has Come," is sandwiched between "Christmas Hymn" and "Sleigh Ride." The backing vocals from secular pop/rock band Chicago's Bill Champlin provide a harder edge than had been heard in Grant's songs to date, even though "Love Has Come" is not nearly as hard-driving as "Emmanuel."

In fact, both "Emmanuel" and "Love Has Come" easily could have fit on Grant's next studio album, Straight Ahead (released just a few months later in early 1984). That album features pop/rock tunes at the same musical level as A Christmas Album: far beyond anything on the mostly mellow Age to Age's plate and with hints of Unguarded's full-blown technopop. A Christmas Album, then, contains the first signs of Amy Grant's coming transition from CCM superstar to secular pop artist.

But beyond any considerations of its place in Amy Grant's career, A Christmas Album is an excellent album in its own right. Even more than two decades later, its production quality is excellent, thanks to the sterling work of producer Bannister. (The closest CCM Christmas album to this one in spirit is Steven Curtis Chapman's The Music of Christmas, which was also helmed by Bannister.) Grant has released two additional Christmas albums in the succeeding years, but it's this one that's fondly remembered. Many people put it in rotation every Christmas season and even throughout the year.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My favorite Christmas album, November 2, 2004
This review is from: A Christmas Album (Audio CD)
I have been a big fan of Amy Grant for 25 years, and, in my opinion, this is absolutely the best Christmas album. I have actually worn out two audio cassette tapes from playing too often; but I now own the CD and hope it never wears out! You won't be disappointed with her soft version of several classic Christmas carols, and her well-written original music is timeless.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Lovely Tunes, Great Voice, Quite Enjoyable!, December 2, 2009
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This review is from: Christmas Album (Audio CD)
When it comes to Christmas albums, Amy Grant does it right. She doesn't just play it safe and pump out an uninspired collection that chiefly takes from tried-and-true classics. She also goes off on a limb and creates Christmas tunes of her own that are touching, warm, and fun to listen to. Her voice is, as always, a joy to hear. The only detracting factor from this particular album is the terrifying 80s synth. I still like it -- but mostly for nostalgia's sake. I'm sure if I hadn't grown up with it, I would find it annoying.

"Tennessee Christmas" is warm and pleasant, with guitars and a bit of country flavor. Lovely original tune -- never ceases to make me smile. "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing" is gorgeous -- full orchestra effect, plus a chorus. "Praise the King" and "Emmanuel" feature that 80s synth sound that you'll either hate or love. I can't deny that I love the arrangements -- very exciting and fun to listen to. I often wish that they were recorded with more traditional and timeless instruments.

I love how "Emmanuel" segues into "Little Town of Bethlehem," a stirring and unique rendition of the old Yuletide favorite. (It's a wonder how Amy Grant manages to take such classics and jazz them up without making them sound horrible and ridiculous.) The next song, "Christmas Hymn," is magnificent, full, and rich, with great piano and chorus; on the whole, a bit forgettable, but definitely well-crafted and enjoyable.

One of my favorites, too -- synth notwithstanding -- is "Love Has Come." It always makes me want to stand up and sing (and sometimes, when I'm sure nobody is looking or watching, I do)! The way that Grant and co. use dynamics in conjunction with statements of faith really makes this song pop out from the rest of the collection.

"Sleigh Ride" is your typical arrangement... not all that different from the slew of other "Sleigh Rides" out there. Still pretty fun, though -- so merry and peppy that you can't help but tap your toe to it. "The Christmas Song" and "Heirlooms" usually fly right under my radar -- sweet, but not really all that striking. When they play, I always forget that they're on.

The album ends on "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God/Angels We Have Heard on High," which is quite effective. When the song sweeps up into the hopeful refrains of "Angels We Have Heard on High," it sends you out with high spirits and fills you with a lovely warmth. Perfect end to a great album.

To the uninitiated, it's worth a try. The only thing that keeps this album from timelessness is that goofy synth -- which is never poorly done, by the by, but may prove irritating to some. As for me, I feel like this album is worth every dollar -- it's well-crafted, and lots of fun, and Amy Grant's voice is awesome.
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