CD: Loretta Lynn - White Christmas Blue | reviews, news & interviews
CD: Loretta Lynn - White Christmas Blue
CD: Loretta Lynn - White Christmas Blue
Classy but predictable seasonal offering from The Coal Miner’s Daughter
Another day, another country Christmas album. Yesterday, on theartsdesk, Kacey Musgraves’s A Very Kacey Christmas was given the once over. Today, it’s the more storied, more venerable Loretta Lynn’s White Christmas Blue, her second-ever Christmas album and the belated sequel to 1966’s Country Christmas. Fifty years ago, that album opened with its self-penned title track.
“Away in a Manger” was on Country Christmas and it crops again on White Christmas Blue. The same with “Blue Christmas, “Frosty the Snowman", “White Christmas” and Lynn’s own "To Heck with Ole Santa Claus". This is a meta album: as much about Lynn and her past as it is about marking Christmas. Building on the premise, Lynn’s “White Christmas Blue”, which opens the new album (“you’re making my white Christmas blue”) is also new but cleverly nods back to the 1966 album. All mind-boggling stuff for what is, seemingly, a straightforward seasonal offering.
Lynn’s status as a great is secure, not just due to her unique voice but also as a songwriter. Her own songs have tackled gender inequality and the right to female self-determination. The importance was underlined when her life story became the subject of the 1980 biopic The Coal Miner’s Daughter. More recently, the now-84 Lynn has worked with Elvis Costello and Jack White. She does not exist in a country vacuum. Despite all this, White Christmas Blue is unlikely to be seen in the future as a career highlight.
White Christmas Blue is, like its predecessor Full Circle, produced by John Carter Cash, the son of Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash. Hardily surprisingly, a Christmas album so dialled-in to country’s and Lynn’s own heritage is much as expected. It’s classy, with a sparse instrumentation showcasing Lynn’s voice and no trace of the tacky. In the evergreen words which Muriel Spark had Miss Jean Brody speak: “For those who like that sort of thing, that is the sort of thing they like.”
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