Darlene Love has a bit of a background in Christmas music; in the '60s, she was one of the best vocalists in
Phil Spector's stable of studio performers (recording under her own name and as part of
the Crystals and
Bob B. Soxx & the Blue Jeans) and sang lead on the best track on
Spector's fabled
A Christmas Gift for You, "Christmas (Baby, Please Come Home)." Forty-four years later,
Love has cut another seasonal set, and
It's Christmas, Of Course is a fine and rollicking set of Yuletide rock and R&B. Here
Love handles a dozen tunes previously recorded by a wide variety of acts, ranging from
Tom Petty's "Christmas All Over Again" and
the Pretenders' "2000 Miles" to
NRBQ's "Christmas Wish" and "Thanks for Christmas," written and recorded by
XTC under the alias "The Three Wise Men." While
Love was pushing seventy when she cut these sessions, she sounds just as lively as she did when she was an integral part of
Spector's Wall of Sound, and if anything her sense of phrasing and selling a song has actually improved; she brings a superb sense of lover's melancholy to "2000 Miles" and adds an appropriately churchy tone to "Who Took the Merry Out of Christmas" and "Christmas Must Be Tonight," while swinging hard on "What Christmas Means to Me" and "Santa Claus Go Straight to the Ghetto." Even
Billy Squier's forgettable "Christmas Is the Time to Say 'I Love You'" sounds great in
Love's hands, and her version of "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)" sounds both timely and powerful. The production from
Shawn Amos and
Kevin Killen is straightforward and effective, and the arrangements are concise but strong enough to support
Love's vocals. While many holiday albums sound like quickly recorded afterthoughts,
It's Christmas, Of Course is as strong as anything
Darlene Love has cut since her 1998 gospel disc
Unconditional Love, and it's great stuff for your next Yuletide party.