Pressing Play on Christmas Music

christmasbox

You may not want to hear it but it’s less than a month until Christmas. Shopping centres pulled the decorations out of the box weeks ago but more and more of us will be decorating our homes in the coming days.

I must admit that I’ve already hit the play button on my Christmas music selection. I’ve got a few hundred Christmas songs on my iPod and they’ve already been filling our home with Yuletide cheer … whatever that is. Everyone from Michael Buble to Diana Krall, Bing Crosby, Run DMC, Barry White, The Wiggles, Guy Sebastian, Jimmy Barnes and even Russel Coight, along with many others, are singing about Christmas on our stereo.

What is your favourite Christmas music?

Do you have a favourite Christmas song? Do you have a favourite artist at Christmas time? Does Mariah Carey’s very successful Christmas album get a spin at your place each December?

I’m not a huge fan of the song Little Drummer Boy but I am a fan of both Bing Crosby and David Bowie so I love hearing their Little Drummer Boy / Peace On Earth medley around this time every year. The chat at the start of the video is cheesy and somewhat awkward but I just love it. Enjoy.

Let me know about your musical tastes around Christmas.



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How Embarrassing

cds

I posted on Facebook a few days ago that I was listening to Air Supply’s Greatest Hits. This immediately split people into two groups; those who thought it was a great musical choice and those who ridiculed my Monday afternoon listening. One person even asked if I had any Barry Manilow CDs in my collection. As a matter of fact I do have one.

My musical tastes are eclectic to say the least. If you put my iPod onto shuffle you would be likely to hear everything from Lorde to Alicia Keys, Electric Guest, Eliza Doolittle, The Whitlams, David Bowie, Bob Dylan, Jim Croce, a fair amount of Amy Winehouse through to plenty of Regina Spektor and you’re very likely to hear lots of Diana Krall. There’ll also be The Jam, The Clash, The Who, The Band, The Beatles, Boz Scaggs, Neil Diamond, Hoodoo Gurus, Joe Jackson and far too many others to mention. You might say I’ve got Everything But the Girl … and you’d be right. I’m a big fan of their music.

I’d love to know what your ‘guilty musical pleasures’ are. What are the albums you’re happy to hear but that others find a little embarrassing? You can see a few of mine above. As well as Air Supply and Barry Manilow there’s Bing Crosby, Brenda Lee and countrier than country Dwight Yoakam. I’m sure if you spent a while looking through my whole collection you’d find others that’d make you groan.

What music do you own and listen to that others would consider ‘totally uncool’?



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Bing and Bowie

bing_bowie

I’m not a huge fan of the song Little Drummer Boy but I am a fan of both Bing Crosby and David Bowie so I love hearing their Little Drummer Boy / Peace On Earth medley around this time every year.

The chat at the start of the video is cheesy and somewhat awkward but I just love it.

(And yes, I do realise that I’ve just shown my age in my musical taste.)



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Space Oddity

hadfield_space_oddity

A revised version of David Bowie’s Space Oddity, recorded by Commander Chris Hadfield on board the International Space Station has been receiving quite a lot of attention over the last couple of days.

As a Bowie fan from way back I wasn’t sure how much I’d enjoy Hadfield’s version but it’s quite captivating. You can watch the video below.

A handful of words have been changed but it’s a fitting farewell from the commander as he leaves the International Space Station. It’s even received approval from David Bowie himself. On Bowie’s official Facebook page he says, “It’s possibly the most poignant version of the song ever created.”



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Remembering Another Man

You’d be forgiven for thinking that Lieutenant Columbo died last month. He didn’t die because he never actually lived. He was a fictional character.

Sadly, the world did lose a great actor last month by the name of Peter Falk who was best known for playing the part of Lieutenant Columbo in the TV series Colombo. I remember watching Colombo many years ago and I always knew that no matter how hard they tried to avoid detection, Colombo would always get his man.

Most of the tributes to Peter Falk talked about his character, Colombo, and the line, “just one more thing”, because that’s mostly what we knew of the man. We didn’t actually know Peter Falk at all but we loved his work. If we did a bit of digging we’d find that he was a twice married man who loved chess. He acted in many television shows and an impressive list of movies, including his memorable role as a grand father in The Princess Bride. We could find out a lot about Peter Falk from his entry on Wikipedia or from his Memoir Just One More Thing, but we still wouldn’t really know the man. Last month when Peter Falk died we remembered some of the characters he had played but we weren’t really remembering him, we were remembering another man.

Who Knows Me?

Most of us will never know the fame that Peter Falk knew but I can see parallels with each one of us. People know our public persona, but do they really know us? People that hear me on the radio think that they know me but they only know part of me. Others, like those who read this blog, might get to know a little more of me but certainly not the whole man. As the circles get tighter and tighter, people know more and more about me. Aquaintances, work colleauges, friends, close friends, extended family, immediate family, each group knows me a little better but who really knows me completely?

Do we want to be known?

Sometimes we can fear people fully knowing us. We keep people at arms length because we’re afraid of what might happen if they knew the truth of who we really are. I’m reminded of one of David Bowie’s early songs, Janine, and one of its lines.

Janine, Janine, you’d like to know me well, But I’ve got things inside my head that even I can’t face.

Sometimes we don’t want to be known because we can’t even face the truth of who we are ourselves.

Life in 3D.

I get the sense that others who are looking at each one of us see us as if they’re watching a 3D movie without the 3D glasses. There are several, indistinct images that seem to float around, each one tells a little of our story but none give a really clear picture. The colours aren’t right, the lines seem blurred and everything’s flat. It’s not until someone is given the 3D glasses that all those faint outlines converge to give the true picture. It’s a picture that goes deeper than the flat, blurry images that they’ve seen before. Suddenly they’re allowed to see us as we truly are, with all our greatest attributes, but also, all our faults. That’s scary but it can also be liberating. We need to be careful about who gets to see us through those glasses but it’s a tragedy if we don’t allow anyone to truly know us.

Who really knows you?

So, are there people who know who you really are? Are you allowing people to see and know the inner man or woman that most of the world will never see? Do you give away too much too soon to too many people or do you hold back and just wish that someone, somewhere knew the real you?

Who are you when no one is looking?

I also wonder if we should try to ensure that the person we are in private is a lot more similar to the person we are in public. Of course we will always adapt to different situations and it is right and proper that we behave differently when the occasion calls for it, but if the difference between our private and public identities is due to a lack of integrity in our private lives, maybe now is the time to deal with the issues preventing us from being honest and open with those around us.

Are you ready to let people get to know the real you or will you only allow them to see the character you’re playing?



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