Track Listing 1. Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town 2. Please Come Home For Christmas 3. Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas 4. If Everyday Could Be Christmas 5. Little Drummer Boy 6. O Holy Night 7. Reason For the Season 8. What Child Is This 9. Winter Wonderland 10. Christmas Song, The (Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire) 11. This Christmas Time
| Details | | Producer: | Dann Huff | | Distributor: | BMG (distributor) | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Lonestar: Richie (vocals, acoustic guitar, keyboards); Michael (acoustic & electric guitars, background vocals); Dean (acoustic guitar, harmonica, piano, keyboards, background vocals); Keech (drums, percussion). Additional personnel includes: Larry Beaird (acoustic & steel guitars); Dann Huff (electric guitar); Bruce Bouton, Paul Franklin (steel guitar); Jonathan Yudkin (mandolin, fiddle, cello); Matt Rollings, Tim Akers (piano, keyboards); Mike Brignardello (bass); Lisa Cochran, Glen M. Childress, Vicki Hampton, Gene Miller, Vicki Hampton, Russell Terrell (background vocals). In the great scheme of things--which is to say in the context of the gazillions of earlier pop Christmas albums--Lonestar's entry into the seasonal sweepstakes probably occupies the middle ground; not quite as good as Phil Spector's A CHRISTMAS GIFT TO YOU but certainly better than the Singing Dogs' "Jingle Bells." (Actually, the Spector reference is not completely out of the ballpark, as the group covers his version of "Santa Claus is Comin' to Town" here). In any case, THIS CHRISTMAS TIME works best when Lonestar stays close to their honky-tonk roots, as on their down and dirty version of Charles Brown's bluesy "Please Come Home for Christmas"). There's a bit more schmaltz in the mix than is really necessary (an easy listening "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas," for example), but on the other hand their Celtic folk-rock approach to the vastly overexposed "Little Drummer Boy" actually manages to make it sound fresh, and for that alone they can be forgiven the album's more MOR moments.
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