What a bad idea for Christmas compilation. The world is full of rock-metal-reggae version of Jingle Bells, astrodelciel, dell'Adeste fidelis and time of farewell, and there are sentimental cartload of vulgarities (try this or this and then you pierce your ears ) and Do They Know It's Christmas, and so on. But sfrucugliando in memory and on the web are still some tasty treats that give a different taste to stay under the tree. We have always chosen as the Top Five, according to the taste of this very moment, with a reserve. of White Christmas Stiff Little Fingers played by already talked a year ago, and the bulldozing.
XTC, "Thanks for Christmas"
The Christmas song. Christmas song really and truly, according to the structure Beatles so it starts with the chorus, then comes the verse (style She loves you, for instance). Sconosciutissima, XTC released under the name of the Three Wise Men (the three wise men). A joy.
The Wetspots, "Fist Me This Christmas"
Take the children away. I suggest a Christmas Wetspots anticonsumista but not meditative. Remember the lubricant and Christmas will be joyous.
The Barenaked Ladies, "Jingle Bells."
The favorite of my son. A versioncina allegrotta and demented semidisowned of Jingle Bells, and BNL never disappoint.
The Tryfles, "Gloria (In Excelsis Deo)
You can sing the Gloria in contemporary and classic Gloria by Van Morrison? The immaterial and material? The synthesis, even ontological, is the Tryfles. Due point: that glory is not in Mozart and the Gloria is NOT the Doors (closed controversy).
The Pogues, "Fairytale of New York"
A beautiful Christmas story about two misfits, him and her alcoholic toxic, they love to let a night of Christmas before that a year later. Wonderful video b / n, emotion tons.
Antony and Boy George, "Happy Christmas"
And finally a classic, Happy Xmas lennoniana cloying, this time made by two little voices do not hurt. Curious to hear that Boy George does a low voice. Sorry for the video but I found something better to iutùb.
treble Antony And we can only hope / you a Merry Christmas a bit 'alternative.
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