Santa Gooood?

Written by Bill Sherman
Published December 17, 2003

Ah, Christmas, a time for annoying novelty numbers and musical kitsch best left in the quarter bin of someone's June garage sale. Spurred by both the recent purchase of a Moody Blues holiday disc for my Justin Hayward-enamored wife - and a series of blog posts by Jim Henley and friends on cover songs - I started considering the halt and the lame: misbegotten Xmas covers that are better forgotten, even though you know someone's got 'em on this year's party mix tape. Here are five (with an added obscurity as a stocking stuffer) for your edification. Why not add your own nominations in the Comments section below?:

  • D.I., "Mister Grinch": Nuthin' like holiday cheer to bring out the brat in punk rockers. There are, for instance, a number of punkish remakes of "Silent Night," the funniest of which has gotta be a Mr. Gumby-ish track by Brit pop-punkers, the Boys (going under under the name of the Yobs), though the Dickies' speedball rendition is probably the most familiar. But for thudding pointlessness, this sludgy cover of the Doctor Seuss/Albert Hague holiday cartoon put-down is the absolute nadir: it appears on a collection entitled Punk Rock Xmas alongside gems like the Ramones' "Merry Christmas (I Don't Wanna Fight Tonight)" and Pansy Division's "Homo Christmas" - and I skip this track every time it comes up. Sounds as if the band recorded it half awake after listening to Tony the Tiger's version once off the teevee in the other room. Really and truly dreadful.

  • Joan Jett, "Little Drummer Boy": First time I heard Joan's hard-rockin' rendition of this classic dose of holiday saccharin, it was tagged onto the end of her I Love Rock 'N' Roll album, where it sounded thoroughly out of place. Maybe it'll do better in an Xmas tape, I remember thinking, so I dutifully included it on one I was making for a holiday party. Sorry, no go - this song just brings out the worst in otherwise fine rockers (see also the egregious Bowie/Crosby duet for further details), and that rave-up guitar solo slapped onto the end is completely antithetical to the song's would-be lyrical setting. An ignoble failure.

  • Moody Blues, "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)": No matter what their religion, it's every pop artist's right to go into the studio and cut a Christmas album - preferably in some Bahamian studio, right? This year, the aging Brit prog rockers released their obligatory December disc, which includes a cover of John Lennon's overplayed anti-war carol. Whatever your thoughts on the Iraq War, you've gotta admit the thought's timely. I was all prepared to get behind this track (no Yoko in the chorus!) - except just when you expect the song to soar into the "War is over/If you want it" harmonic chorus, the boys don't sing it and just let the orchestra carry on the melody. Wotta bunch of wimps.

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Bill Sherman is a mostly harmless pop culture nerd who can either be found at the Pop Culture Gadabout blog or in his capacity as Comics & Graphics Novel review editor at this here site. He once wrote a history of underground comix for a Spanish comics encyclopedia - which he can no longer read since he lost the original manscript and can't read Spanish.
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Santa Gooood?
Published: December 17, 2003
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Writer: Bill Sherman
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#1 — December 17, 2003 @ 14:50PM — Chris Puzak [URL]

The single worst collection of covers I have ever heard is A Brutal Christmas in which Christian metal bands cover traditonal Christmas songs. Ever wanted to hear a death metal version of "The Little Drummer Boy"? Now you can!

#2 — December 23, 2005 @ 16:31PM — Christopher

It's been a while since the last comment, however, it needs to be stated. "A Brutal Christmas" is in fact an excellent cd. When it comes to metal/rock/hardcore fans, there really are no cds to listen to come Christmas time. A few punk rock Christmas cd's, and this year, an hardcore/emo cd came out. For metal fans, this cd is excellent. The band quality is top notch, as well as original sounds. This cd gives the traditional feel with a much needed edge for the more intense music fans. And yes, the death metal version of "The Little Drummer Boy" is one word...AMAZING.

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