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We Need a Little Christmas (album)

We Need a Little Christmas
Williams-Little.jpg
Studio album by Andy Williams
Released June 19, 1995
Recorded 1995 at
Quad Studio,
Nashville, Tennessee,
Studio 3319,
Nashville, Tennessee,
Synchrosound Studios,
Nashville, Tennessee,
CMP Studio,
Nashville, Tennessee,
Joy Spring Farm Studio,
Liepers Fork, Tennessee,
Digital Domain Studio,
Irvine, California,
The Battery,
Nashville, Tennessee
Genre
Length 44:53
Label Unison Music
Producer Don Boyer
Andy Williams chronology
16 Most Requested Songs: Encore!
(1995)16 Most Requested Songs: Encore!1995
We Need a Little Christmas
(1995)
The Best of Andy Williams
(1996)The Best of Andy Williams1996
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 2.5/5 stars

We Need a Little Christmas is a Christmas album by American pop singer Andy Williams that was released by Unison Music in 1995. It gives an adult contemporary treatment to songs that Williams had previously recorded for 1963's The Andy Williams Christmas Album ("Away In A Manger", "The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting On An Open Fire)", "It's The Most Wonderful Time Of The Year", "Silent Night"), 1965's Merry Christmas ("Mary's Little Boy Child"), 1974's Christmas Present ("Angels We Have Heard On High", "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing", "I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day", "What Child Is This"), and 1990's I Still Believe in Santa Claus ("I'll Be Home for Christmas") and includes three songs that Williams had not recorded before. In a brief note on the back of the jewel case Williams writes, "These all-new recordings feature fresh, innovative arrangements of some of my favorite carols. I felt like I was singing them for the very first time."

The Recording Industry Association of America awarded the album Gold certification for sales of 500,000 units on February 2, 1998.

Of the three songs on the album that Williams had not recorded before, "Jolly Old Saint Nicholas" is the least traceable in origin, although it is estimated that it was written in the late 19th century. The year in which "Up on the House Top" was written is also uncertain, but because its creator, Benjamin Hanby, was in his mid-30s when he died in 1867, the 1850s or 1860s is the estimate. The third newcomer, "We Need a Little Christmas", comes from the 1966 Broadway musical Mame.


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