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The Lost Christmas Eve
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The Lost Christmas Eve
Current price: $11.99
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Barnes and Noble
The Lost Christmas Eve
Current price: $11.99
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Size: CD
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The story that unfolds during
Trans-Siberian Orchestra
's third
Christmas
CD deals with angels visiting New York City, which gives this orchestrated
rock
group a chance to draw upon a wide variety of modern music. The jaunty
"Christmas Nights in Blue"
sounds like it was influenced by
Louis Jordan
and is the coolest moment the orchestra has ever offered, while the driving
"Christmas Jam"
is
Edgar Winter
's
"Frankenstein"
with some sleigh bells. Not that the group was ever "traditional," but the songs here sound less influenced by the old
standards
, and they're generally more fun and uplifting. The quiet numbers are delicate and beautiful, and there are a number of them in the album's fourth quarter. The problem with the album is it's nearly choked with too much material, with a great number of the songs existing solely to move the story along. That's when the album gets too emotive, too forced, and too
Electric Light Orchestra
without
Jeff Lynne
. Good new is, whittle out the dreck and you've still have plenty left to enjoy. Even though it won't win them any new fans,
The Lost Christmas Eve
is rumored to be an "end of the trilogy" album. If so, the trilogy ends with a big, theatrical bang, and
fans wouldn't have it any other way. ~ David Jeffries
Trans-Siberian Orchestra
's third
Christmas
CD deals with angels visiting New York City, which gives this orchestrated
rock
group a chance to draw upon a wide variety of modern music. The jaunty
"Christmas Nights in Blue"
sounds like it was influenced by
Louis Jordan
and is the coolest moment the orchestra has ever offered, while the driving
"Christmas Jam"
is
Edgar Winter
's
"Frankenstein"
with some sleigh bells. Not that the group was ever "traditional," but the songs here sound less influenced by the old
standards
, and they're generally more fun and uplifting. The quiet numbers are delicate and beautiful, and there are a number of them in the album's fourth quarter. The problem with the album is it's nearly choked with too much material, with a great number of the songs existing solely to move the story along. That's when the album gets too emotive, too forced, and too
Electric Light Orchestra
without
Jeff Lynne
. Good new is, whittle out the dreck and you've still have plenty left to enjoy. Even though it won't win them any new fans,
The Lost Christmas Eve
is rumored to be an "end of the trilogy" album. If so, the trilogy ends with a big, theatrical bang, and
fans wouldn't have it any other way. ~ David Jeffries