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The Independent: 'One Wish - The Holiday Album'
submitted by: Lisa D.
source: The Independent (London)
Date: December 12, 2003
By Andy Gill
Whitney Houston
One Wish - The Holiday Album
ARISTA
There's an odd photograph in the CD booklet to Whitney's Christmas album -
not of holly or snow, or fir trees or robins, but of a coal-effect fire in
a squeaky-clean modern fireplace - the kind of thing Handy Andy might knock
together in a few minutes out of MDF and beige marble-effect veneer. It's
presumably intended to evoke comforting, hearth-and-home seasonal values,
but instead implies the bland commercialism of the modern Christmas with surprising
accuracy.
It's certainly more than appropriate for an album whose glutinous one- world
sentiments are signalled both by the title-track "One Wish (for Christmas)"
- yes, it's for world peace, just imagine that - and by the subtitle The Holiday
Album, which plays to the contemporary American vogue for "inclusivity"
and not wanting to seem disdainful of other, less fortunate religions, by
replacing references to Christmas with the mealy-mouthed term "the holiday
season". Although Whitney, well-known for her gospel roots, is obviously
Christian to her toenails, she goes out of her way here to broaden her seasonal
felicitations/overseas market (delete according to cynicism) with a pan-theological
attitude that finds her, in "The Christmas Song", wishing listeners
not just "Merry Christmas" but "Happy Hanukkah" and even
"Happy Kwanzaa" . In Whitney's world, we can all join in!
On most of the tracks, she's working here with producer Mervyn Warren, whose
arrangements are ambitious without being too overbearing. "Have Yourself
A Merry Little Christmas" and a medley of "Deck the Halls/Silent
Night" are virtually perfect in conception and execution, the latter
involving a subtle balance of piety and conviviality within a fusion-funk
setting, and Whitney for once restraining her more far-fetched vocal strategies.
(Warren himself, it transpires, is a gifted singer too, single-handedly overdubbing
a vocal arrangement to "O Come, O Come, Emmanuel" that sounds like
all of Take Six at once). Elsewhere, she's not so self-effacing: you'd be
amazed at how many syllables she can cram into the word "Noel",
and there's an extraordinary "dab-a-doo-be" scat insertion in "The
Christmas Song" just prior to the line "Santa's on his way".
There's also an interesting vocal mid-section to "Little Drummer Boy",
built on the percussive possibilities of the song's "pa-rup-a-pum-pum"
motif (although we'll draw a discreet veil over the inclusion of daughter
Bobbi Kristina Brown on the song's first verse, which should come with a diabetic
warning).
Whitney's vocal excesses reach their apex (or nadir) on "I'll Be Home
for Christmas", which features a quite absurd bout of sustained elision.
It's impressive, but utterly unsuited to material more deserving of humble
warmth and homely sincerity than the orgasmic ecstasy the prospect seems to
stir in Whitney.
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