Pentatonix feat. Hiba Tawaji | Hark! The Herald Angels Sing

MotD holiday standby Pentatonix released their seventh holiday album, Holidays Around The World, in 2022. The record, which won a Grammy for Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album, songs from many different cultures. Hiba Tawaji, a Lebanese singer, is featured on this track. It begins in D, shifts up to Eb at 1:20, and up another step to F at 2:07.

Straight No Chaser | I Pray on Christmas

Straight No Chaser has become one of the most prominent professional a cappella groups in the United States after starting as a student group at Indiana University in 1996. They have released numerous holiday albums, and “I Pray on Christmas” is featured on their 2023 record Stocking Stuffers. The song was written and first released by Harry Connick Jr. on his 1993 album When My Heart Finds Christmas.

The tune begins in A and modulates up to Bb at 2:00.

The Waitresses | Christmas Wrapping

Chris Butler, the songwriter and guitarist on The Waitresses’ cult classic “Christmas Wrapping,” (1981): “‘I was such a Scrooge. I hated Christmas! Also, I worked as a freelance journalist,” (The Guardian). “In December in New York, everyone with a job takes a long holiday, so I’d get offered work I was too poor to turn down. I’d have all this stuff to do when everyone else was having their eggnog. And I poured my sourness into this song. The first words I wrote down were: Bah humbug. The chorus went: Merry Christmas. But I think I’ll miss this one this year. It’s about two people alone at Christmas who meet while buying cranberry sauce, and get together. Of course, it had to have a happy ending – it’s Christmas! – but it was tongue in cheek. … I still get grumpy at Christmas. Every year, when I get stuck in traffic because of idiots buying crap for their unloved in-laws, that song always seems to come on the radio. And then I think: Lighten up, man, it’s Christmas.’”

Tracy Wormworth (bass and backing vocals): “‘At the time, Good Times by Chic was out; for bass players, Bernard Edwards’ badass bassline was iconic. I wasn’t trying to rip it off, but I was heavily inspired by it. I sat in the studio and worked out note for note what I would play. Like the band, the song is a real mix. I had no idea how catchy the song would prove to be. It would trip me out if I walked into a chain store and it was playing.”

After the second verse and second instrumental chorus (complete with its slightly off-kilter hook from the horns), a brief instrumental bridge shifts up a perfect fourth from 2:10 – 2:30. After reverting to the original key, the track’s bridge returns at 4:07 – 4:27 before a final extended chorus (this time with vocals proclaiming the hook!) wraps up the tune.

Delving into the track’s top-drawer bass line in wonderful detail is this video from bassist and music educator Paul Thompson:

Jessica Vosk & Neil Patrick Harris | Let It Snow/Winter Wonderland

Broadway singer Jessica Vosk released her first holiday album, Sleigh, last month. This mash-up of “Let It Snow” and “Winter Wonderland” features her fellow Broadway performer Neil Patrick Harris. It begins in Eb and modulates up a step to F at 2:29.

Home Free + Straight No Chaser | Somewhere In My Memory

Home Free, an American country a cappella group, released Any Kind of Christmas, their third holiday album, earlier this year. The group rose to prominence after winning the fourth season of the NBC reality-singing competition The Sing-Off in 2013.

“Somewhere In My Memory,” originally written by John Williams for the 1990 film Home Alone, was nominated for a Grammy and an Oscar. Home Free’s cover features the Indiana-based a cappella group Straight No Chaser, and is the final track on the album. It begins in Bb and modulates up to C at 4:12.

Mike Curb Congregation | Burning Bridges (from “Kelly’s Heroes”)

Kelly’s Heroes (1970) featured Clint Eastwood “and a rowdy gang of G.I. goofballs including roughneck Telly Savalas, new agey Donald Sutherland, bitter wiseass Don Rickles and young, harmonica-playing, exactly-the-same-looking Harry Dean Stanton (credited as Dean Stanton). It kinda feels like one of those fun ensemble war pictures like The Dirty Dozen or The Great Escape, except the idea behind it is much more cynical,” (OutlawVern.com). “Clint plays Kelly, a once great soldier, demoted and disillusioned after an incorrect order caused him to blow up some of his own men. When he finds out about a stash of gold bars in a German bank, he finally has a mission he can believe in again.

… The theme song ‘Burning Bridges’ (is) performed by The Mike Curb Congregation. Curb … scored The Wild Angels and The Born Losers … and was also the president of MGM Records. ‘Burning Bridges’ was the Congregation’s biggest hit (#1 in Australia!), though they also had some success with a version of ‘It’s a Small World’ from an album of Disney covers, (and) were featured on Sammy Davis Jr.’s version of ‘The Candy Man.’ … I thought the cornball vocals of ‘Burning Bridges’ added kind of a flower children-y touch to the movie, but I’m not sure Curb would like that characterization. In the same year Kelly’s Heroes came out, he made a splash by dumping The Velvet Underground and other groups from MGM because he thought they promoted drugs. In 1978, Curb was elected lieutenant governor of California, a Republican working under Jerry Brown. Still, the Congregation found time to record ‘Together, a New Beginning,’ the theme song for Ronald Reagan’s successful 1980 presidential campaign. So, not really the hippie I took him for.”

In Curb’s version, half-step key changes hit at 0:58 and 1:40. Keep scrolling for a mellower version (performed by Clint himself) which features an artier V/IV upward half-step shift at 1:55 and skips the second modulation of the original. Clint’s version wasn’t in the movie itself, but was also released as a single. Many thanks to our regular poster Rob P. for this submission!