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2024 0-9 z y x w v u t s r q p o n m l k j i h g f e d c b a

Burl Ives - Christmas Album '1968 / 2022

24bit
Christmas Album
ArtistBurl Ives Related artists
Album name Christmas Album
Country
Date 1968 / 2022
GenreFolk
Play time 33:58
Format / Bitrate 24 BIT Stereo 2429 Kbps / 96 kHz
Media WEB
Size 661 / 177 MB
PriceDownload $5.95
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Tracks list

Tracklist:

01. It Came Upon the Midnight Clear
02. Silent Night, Holy Night
03. O Little Town of Bethlehem
04. O Holy Night
05. Happy Birthday, Jesus (A Child's Prayer)
06. Oh What a Lucky Boy am I
07. Jingle Bells
08. Santa Mouse
09. Ave Maria
10. The Christmas Story
11. Medley: Thy Rebuke / Behold (from "The Messiah")


 moreBorn Burl Icle Ivanhoe Ives in Hunt City, Illinois on June 14, 1909,
Ives first sang publicly at the invitation of his uncle, who invited him to
perform at a soldiers' reunion event in town after overhearing him sing at home
with his mother. Ives went on to attend the Eastern Illinois State Teachers
College, where he played football before dropping out of school in 1929. He
instead traveled the country, singing, playing banjo, and working odd jobs until
he was offered the opportunity to perform on WBOW in Terre Haute, Indiana. He
then re-enrolled in school, attending Indiana State Teachers College (later know
as Indiana State University). In 1933, he moved to New York and took classes at
Juilliard and New York University, studying acting with Benno Schneider and
voice with Ella Toedt. During his time there, he also performed folk songs in
Greenwich Village clubs. By the end of 1938, he had made his Broadway debut with
a small role in Rodgers & Hart's The Boys from Syracuse, starring Eddie Albert.
In 1939, Ives and Albert moved to Los Angeles, sharing an apartment together
near Hollywood.

In 1940, Ives began to appear regularly on radio, including on his own CBS show,
The Wayfarin' Stranger, which he named after one of his ballads. He cut his
first album, Okeh Presents the Wayfarin' Stranger, in 1941. He eventually moved
to a major label, Decca, in 1944, and made his film debut in Smoky in 1946.
Amidst a plethora of music releases spanning children's songs, traditional folk,
and hymns, his autobiography, Wayfaring Stranger, was published in 1948, and
that year, he had his first Top 30 hit with "Blue Tail Fly" (known familiarly as
"Jimmy Crack Corn"), which he recorded with the Andrew Sisters and the Vic
Schoen Orchestra. In 1949, he hit number 16 on the U.S. singles chart with an
Eliot Daniel (music) and Larry Morey (lyrics) version of the folksong
"Lavender's Blue (Dilly Dilly)" released as "Lavender Blue" and performed by
Ives in the film So Dear to My Heart. It was nominated for an Academy Award for
Best Original Song. The same year, Ives moved briefly to Columbia Records.
Around that time, and helping to usher in the 12-inch format, he also recorded a
series of albums for Encyclopedia Britannica Films under the overall title
Historical America in Song.

In 1951, Ives hit the Top Ten with a version "On Top of Old Smoky" recorded with
Percy Faith & His Orchestra. By then, he had returned to Decca. He had two more
Top 30 singles that decade with 1952's "The Wild Side of Life" (with Grady
Martin and the Slewfoot Five) and 1954's "True Love Goes On And On" (with Gordon
Jenkins & His Orchestra & Chorus). He played "Big Daddy" Pollitt in the Pulitzer
Prize-winning Broadway drama Cat on a Hot Tin Roof from 1955 to 1956, a role he
notably reprised in the 1958 film adaptation, where he was billed third, below
Elizabeth Taylor and Paul Newman. In 1959, Ives won the Academy Award for Best
Supporting Actor for his turn as Rufus Hannassey in the western epic The Big
Country.

Now in his fifties, Ives had his second and third Top Ten hits with a pair of
country songs from a series of recordings with Owen Bradley & His Orchestra; "A
Little Bitty Tear" (also featuring the Anita Kerr Singers) reached number nine
in 1961, and "Funny Way of Laughin'" peaked at number ten the following year.
The latter song appeared on 1962's It's Just My Funny Way of Laughin' and won
Ives a Grammy Award for Best Country Western Recording. He ultimately had the
most enduring hit of his career with a song written by Johnny Marks in 1962 and
used in the 1964 animated TV special Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. As the
voice of host and narrator Sam the Snowman, Ives covered both "A Holly Jolly
Christmas" and the already classic title song. "A Holly Jolly Christmas"
eventually went as high as number four on the Hot 100 -- in the year 2020. At
the time, Ives instead had a minor hit with "Pearly Shells (Popo O Ewa)" (with
Owen Bradley & His Orchestra) and appeared in a series of movies, including the
Walt Disney Studios musical Summer Magic (1963), the war comedy-drama Ensign
Pulver (1964), and I Dream of Jeannie inspriation The Brass Bottle (1964). Ives
remained in the public eye, acting increasingly on television throughout the
'60s while making his final entry on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart with
a 1968 cover of Bob Dylan's "I'll Be Your Baby Tonight."

In the 1970s, Ives continued to release music including How Great Thou Art
(1971) for Word, the country outing Payin' My Dues Again (1973) for MCA, and
children's song collections for Disneyland Records. When Disneyland opened in
1974, he voiced animatronic host Sam Eagle for the America Sings attraction. His
endorsement deals for TV and roles on shows like Little House on the Prairie and
Roots kept in the public eye. Even after turning 70 in 1979 and semi-retiring to
Washington State, he continued to take the occasional film or television role
and perform at benefit concerts into the early '90s. Ives died of cancer at his
home in Anacortes, Washington on April 14, 1995.

The Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer special aired annually into the next
millennium, and when Billboard introduced a Holiday Songs chart in 2011 that
took into account sales, streaming, and radio airplay, Ives' "A Holly Jolly
Christmas" and "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" were both represented. They
proved to be perennial favorites, with "A Holly Jolly Christmas" making Top
Three appearances into the 2020s. Originally released in 2001, the collection
20th Century Masters: The Best of Burl Ives reached its highest chart position
yet in January 2021, when it rose to number 24 on the Billboard 200. ~ Marcy
Donelson