When My Heart Finds Christmas - Harry Connick, Jr., Connick, Harry, Jr.
(It Must've Been Ol') Santa Claus - Harry Connick, Jr., Connick, Harry Jr.
The Blessed Dawn of Christmas Day - Harry Connick, Jr., Connick, Harry Jr.
Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow! - Harry Connick, Jr., Cahn, Sammy
The Little Drummer Boy - Harry Connick, Jr., Davis, Katherine [C
Ave Maria - Harry Connick, Jr., Schubert, Franz [Vi
Parade of the Wooden Soldiers - Harry Connick, Jr., Jessel, L.
What Child Is This? - Harry Connick, Jr., Dix, William Chatte
Christmas Dreaming - Harry Connick, Jr., Gordon, I.
I Pray on Christmas - Harry Connick, Jr., Connick, Harry, Jr.
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer - Harry Connick, Jr., Marks, Johnny
O Holy Night - Harry Connick, Jr., Adam, Adolphe
What Are You Doing New Year's Eve? - Harry Connick, Jr., Loesser, Frank
New Orleans pianist, singer, and songwriter Harry Connick Jr. has done what many makers of Christmas records strive for but seldom achieve: he's made a Christmas record that sounds convincingly like a '40s period piece and... more » rigorously like a cool, contemporary jazz disc. His powerful, self-written Christmas songs sound like polished standards, and he delivers the whole package with a sassy, vocal economy (with the occasional New Orleans accent) and an orchestral richness that is never indulgent or overwhelming. When My Heart Finds Christmas is a true classic that no lover of big-band jazz and singing (in the Sinatra style)--and Christmas music--should be without. There are so many great moments here that singling any one out would be at the expense of the others. Still, the reverential, solo-piano intro to "Ave Maria," Connick's own "(It Must've Been Ol') Santa Claus," (a rousing, second-line swing tune), and his triumphant "I Pray on Christmas" (a get-happy-now gospel song) deserve mention if only because they'll earn Connick extra credit in heaven and on Earth. --Martin Keller« less
New Orleans pianist, singer, and songwriter Harry Connick Jr. has done what many makers of Christmas records strive for but seldom achieve: he's made a Christmas record that sounds convincingly like a '40s period piece and rigorously like a cool, contemporary jazz disc. His powerful, self-written Christmas songs sound like polished standards, and he delivers the whole package with a sassy, vocal economy (with the occasional New Orleans accent) and an orchestral richness that is never indulgent or overwhelming. When My Heart Finds Christmas is a true classic that no lover of big-band jazz and singing (in the Sinatra style)--and Christmas music--should be without. There are so many great moments here that singling any one out would be at the expense of the others. Still, the reverential, solo-piano intro to "Ave Maria," Connick's own "(It Must've Been Ol') Santa Claus," (a rousing, second-line swing tune), and his triumphant "I Pray on Christmas" (a get-happy-now gospel song) deserve mention if only because they'll earn Connick extra credit in heaven and on Earth. --Martin Keller