One More Drifter in the Snow

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (348 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 33:00

eMusic Review

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Lindsey Thomas

eMusic Contributor

Lindsey Thomas began writing about music as a snarky columnist for her high school newspaper. She has since become slightly less snarky, and has worked as an ed...more »

04.22.11
An appropriately introspective holiday album.
Label: SuperEgo Records

Even among earnest singer-songwriters, Aimee Mann stands out for her unflappable solemnity. So it comes as no surprise that this woman who rarely cracks a smile has produced a Christmas album that sets the mood for post-holiday-gorge loafing, not a drunken office party. Fortunately, Mann knows how to choose classics that work with her natural aesthetic. When it comes time to liven things up with a Yuletide cartoon anthem, she opts for one that's serious but fun, "You're a Mean One, Mr. Grinch," with Grant-Lee Phillips taking over Boris Karloff's narrating duties. In addition to the standards, One More Drifter in the Snow features "Christmastime," a song written by husband Michael Penn and frequent collaborator Jon Brion, which enters on a light-hearted mandola strum and quickly takes a slinking, minor-keyed turn. The singer's own "Calling on Mary" is a somber bit of introspection, the sort of brooding that naturally occurs every December, but which most carol composers choose to ignore.

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Quiet Strange Christmas Music

FredEd

Aimee Mann sings in a sad, far away voice. The songs are pretty and very well sung, but it is not a cheery holiday album. It is sad and almost mournful. I like it, though.

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Quietly festive

Flyvebaad

That cold-outside-warm-inside sound that manages to be Christmas without even the slightest hint of smaltz. This is what all holiday music should be!

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a xmas treat

ellawitch

one of my fave xmas albums. she really gave a fresh take on the songs and as a result, this is a album i can listen to year round.

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I Love Aimee

EMUSIC-008DB7D1

But as much as I love her, get every other album she's done before this one. Sorry they're not on emusic. I do like "Calling On Mary" quite a bit.

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Excellent

JJBCO

Yeah, this one's a bit downbeat for Christmas, but it's a nice contrast to the bubbly regular fare typically heard during the season. After all, Christmas isn't all about presents and sleigh rides.

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nice discovery

jrathay

This is my favorite xmas cd ever. Aimee has one of the finest voices around. Also very nice renditions of all the classics.

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just this

6bmike

this is all we get of Aimee Mann- a Christmas Album?? What no dusty demos of her singing before a contract ?

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Pass the matches

badjwlr

I actually downloaded this dog last year ('06). It does not age well -- unless you need a reason to turn up the gas and stick your head in the oven during Christmas. After 20 years, does Aimee Mann think that her off-the-cuff, gargling Lavoris vocals are actually entertaining? This one is only attractive to hipsters who are suicidal and want to out-Kafka their pathetic associates.

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Best Christmas Album Ever?

Branflakes

Okay, I may be a little given to hyperbole (at least that's what my wife tells me) but this is the best Christmas album I own. It's the perfect album to put on while savouring a glass of wine, reflecting on the year gone by, & gazing into the lights of the Christmas tree. What makes it so great is that it pretty much hangs together as a coherent whole - and it can be listened to at a sitting (which makes it even better than Sufjan's lengthy Christmas CDs). Well, the Grinch track seemed a bit out of place at first but I love it now, and it fits in just right. Best track for me: 'Have Yourself A Merry Little Christmas' - beautiful, laidback, heartfelt.

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First Christmas Album I would ever invest in!

xeliad

This album really made me happy about Christmas music. She just hits the right moods for me, without the sticky sappy-ness I've come to expect of the holiday. Really nice, I like her originals as much as the old favorites.

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They Say All Media Guide

There’s not much in Aimee Mann’s past that would suggest that she would record a holiday album. Ever since launching a solo career in 1993 with Whatever, she’s steadily built a reputation as a consummate singer/songwriter, renowned for her intelligent craft, which perhaps peaked around the turn of the century when she provided songs for Paul Thomas Anderson’s third film, Magnolia, which led to her excellent third album, Bachelor No. 2. Since that project, Mann’s work remained at a typically high level, but her subsequent albums — 2002′s Lost in Space and 2005′s The Forgotten Arm — were a touch too studied and deliberate, certainly not the kinds of records that would point the way toward a holiday excursion like 2006′s One More Drifter in the Snow. Not that this Christmas album is far removed from the music Mann has made over the past decade: it’s hushed and intimate, filled with antique keyboards that occasionally exude a mildly carnivalesque vibe, so it does feel of a piece with Mann’s last few albums, yet the tone is different. Of course, part of the change in tone is that this is a holiday album, and Mann clearly intends for One More Drifter in the Snow to be played alongside classic ’50s Christmas albums from Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin. This album has a similarly appealing, warm and lazy, jazzy vibe — a sound that evokes the holiday season for millions of listeners, and Mann should be commended not only for nailing that sound, but writing an original called “Calling on Mary” that fits comfortably next to “I’ll Be Home for Christmas” and “Winter Wonderland” (her husband Michael Penn’s “Christmastime” also fits nicely). So, the album feels right, but even better for Mann fans — especially those skeptical about a Christmas record — One More Drifter in the Snow finds the singer/songwriter in top form as a performer, turning in the loosest, friendliest recording she’s made in years. There’s little of the self-consciousness that hampered Lost in Space and The Forgotten Arm; she sounds as if she’s having fun making this music, which not only makes for a good Christmas record, but bodes well for her next proper pop album. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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