Eight underestimated Christmas songs for your festive playlist



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The holiday season brings a lot of things: precious family time, glorious food and, more often than not, the urge to push your thumbs in your eyes when you hear those abandoned Christmas carols for what seems to be the billionth time.

There is a special cannon of Christmas melodies that always wake up from their 11-month hibernation and dominate the airwaves as Christmas approaches.

But there is no reason to be a musical Scrooge at this time of the year, because there are many underrated Christmas songs that are pretty good and that will surely plunge you into the seasonal movement of things.

So, forget about Mariah, Cliff, Slade and all the rest: these are the songs you really need in your festive playlist.

Last Christmas from Future Islands

Jimmy Eat World, Cascada, Eliza Doolittle, Carly Rae Jepsen, Gwen Stefani and even Olly Walls covered last Christmas. Suffice to say that their quality varies quite a bit, but this Future Islands effort is one of the best. Released on Christmas Eve 2015, it is a sublime synthesis delight, with singer Samuel Herring's baritone giving it a whole new sense of melancholy. And, in what can only be described as a Christmas miracle, the song can be downloaded for free.

All I want for Christmas by RuPaul

Ho Ho Ho, RuPaul's Christmas 2009 album, is exactly what you expect from a RuPaul Christmas album: fun, subversive and ridiculously fun. The drag icon offers absolute upheavals, from RuPaul, the red-nosed reindeer, to I Saw Daddy, a Santa Claus kiss, but the best track must always be All I Want For Christmas. While all that Nat King Cole wanted was his two front teeth, RuPaul wants a little more: liposuction, cheek implants, butt lift, nasal puncture, toothpicks, chops removed – all shabang. Jingle Bells, that's not it.

Alone at Christmas by Darlene Love

We all heard Darlene Love's famous Christmas tune, Christmas, but did you know she has many other festive songs? The best of them is undoubtedly All Alone For Christmas. It follows roughly the same formula – centered on a large stone choir, full of Christmas emotions – but written and performed by members of Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band (Clarence Clemons, undisputed king of Sax Solo) a real doozy at 2.34). He released in the soundtrack of the second movie of Home Alone in 1992 and presents a rather awesome movie Macaulay Culkin in the video.

Santa Claus goes straight to the Snoop Dogg ghetto

California may not be the first place you think about imagining a winter scene, but that does not mean we can not turn to west coast hip-hop for inspiration for a playlist of Christmas. This Snoop Dogg song is an absolute gem, with a captivating rhythm, inspired by Isaac Hayes, and a catchy vocal hook of Nate Dogg. The couplets feature various rappers evoking the Christmas of the past, while Snoop offers its own interpretation of a shindig ideal for the holidays ("distribute gifts, burst splinters," etc.).

Christmas time is here by Khruangbin

This one may be underestimated because it was released just a month ago, but it will definitely pique the ear of any warned guest if you put it on your Christmas reading list . It's a casual funk piece, thanks to the funk's casual masters, Khruangbin. This is a loose cover of the clbadic jazzy of the same name, released in the album Charlie Brown Holiday Hits Vince Guaraldi in the 60s.

Silent Night by Aretha Franklin

Aretha Franklin's had long had the ambition to release a Christmas album and that's what she did in 2008. The release, This Christmas, is an interpretation of festive clbadics from Hark! The angels of the herald sing to the silent night. The latter was immersed in lush instrumentation with a chorus on the album, but this year a new, streamlined version was released – featuring Franklin and his piano. It's glorious, with the space found that allows his voice to fly. At the end of the year Franklin pbaded away, it reminds us in an incredibly poignant way how majestic it was.

Aretha Franklin – In Pictures

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American soul singer Aretha Franklin in 1968

Associated journals

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Aretha Franklin performs on stage at the Elton John AIDS Foundation commemorates her 25th birthday and pays tribute to founder Sir Elton John at the fall gala in New York at St. John the Divine Cathedral in 2017

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Aretha Franklin, with her husband and director, Ted White, in 1968

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Aretha Franklin in 1967

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American soul singer Aretha Franklin danced for cameras in 1968

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American soul singer Aretha Franklin in 1968

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Aretha Franklin with host and producer Don Cornelius. Franklin was one of the many artists who played in "Soul Train" in the 1970s

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Portrait of American singer Aretha Franklin in 1977

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John Belushi, Aretha Franklin and Dan Aykroyd in "The Blues Brothers" (1980)

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American singer Aretha Franklin, the "first woman of the soul" in 1980

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Legendary soul singer Aretha Franklin (center), shown in an undated photo with former backup vocalists Pamela Vincent, (left) Margaret Branch (center, back) and Brenda Corbet

Reuters

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Rod Stewart performing with soul star Aretha Franklin and actor Dustin Hoffman. New York in 1993

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Aretha Franklin repeats with Blues Brother at Radio City Music Hall in New York for the 40th Grammy Awards

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Aretha Franklin at the Grammy Awards 1994

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Opera singer Luciano Pavarotti laughs with singer Aretha Franklin and the Boyz II Men band (behind) after receiving the MusiCares Foundation's eighth annual "People of the Year" award in New York in 1998

AFP / Getty Images

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Aretha Franklin in "Blues Brothers 2000" (1998)

© Universal

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Aretha Franklin poses with blues brothers John Goodman (left), J.Evan Bonifant (2nd from left), Joe Morton (2nd from right) and Dan Aykroyd (right) after playing the 40th Grammy Awards at Radio City Music Hall in New York

AFP

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Sting and Aretha Franklin accept the Grammy Legend Award for Luciano Pavarotti at the 40th Grammy Awards

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Legendary record artist Aretha Franklin performs at the 1999 Daytime Emmy Awards at Madison Square Garden in New York

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Aretha Franklin performs on stage at the Clive Davis Pre-Grammy Gala at the Regency Hotel's Grand Ballroom in 2003

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Aretha Franklin (left) and Hugh Jackman sing "Somewhere" from the clbadic musical "West Side Story" at the 59th annual Tony Awards at the American Theater Wing at Radio City Music Hall, New York, in 2005

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George W. Bush, President of the United States, presents singer Aretha Franklin with the Presidential Medal of Freedom at a ceremony held in the East Room of the White House in 2005

AP

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Aretha Franklin sings at the funeral of human rights activist Rosa Parks in Detroit, Michigan, in 2005

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Aretha Franklin gestures to crowd during opening ceremonies at Berklee College of Music in 2006

AP

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Aretha Franklin arrives at the Sony BMG Post Grammy Party in Beverly Hills in 2008

Reuters

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Aretha Franklin arrives for the MusiCares 2008 Personality Award

EPA

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Aretha Franklin performs at the swearing-in ceremony at the US Capitol in Washington in 2009

AP

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Aretha Franklin and Tony Bennett perform on stage at Tony Bennett's 85th Anniversary Gala for the Exploration of the Arts at the Metropolitan Opera House in 2011

Getty Images

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Aretha Franklin sits with Reverend Jesse Jackson at the NBA basketball game between the Detroit Pistons and the Miami Heat in Auburn Hills, Michigan in 2011

Reuters

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Aretha Franklin (left) and Elton John attend Tony Bennett's 85th Anniversary Gala for the Exploration of the Arts at the Metropolitan Opera House in 2011

Getty Images

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Aretha Franklin makes an encore with Ronald Isley and Dennis Edwards at the Roll Hall of Fame in tribute to Aretha Franklin, the 16th tribute to the American Music Masters at PlayhouseSquare's State Theater in 2011

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Aretha Franklin performs at BET Honors 2012 at Warner Theater

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Lifetime Achievement Award winner Aretha Franklin performs at the Thelonious Monk International Jazz Drumming Competition and the gala concert at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC in 2012

Getty Images

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Aretha Franklin and Clive Davis attend the 11th annual Keep a Child Alive Black Ball at the Hammerstein Ballroom in 2014

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Aretha Franklin wipes her tears by standing next to the Chilean author, Isabel Allende, left, and the former New York Mayor, Michael Bloomberg, right, at the inauguration ceremonies of Harvard University in 2014.

AP

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Aretha Franklin performs on stage at the Elton John AIDS Foundation commemorates her 25th birthday and pays tribute to founder Sir Elton John at the fall gala in New York at St. John the Divine Cathedral in 2017

Getty Images

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Aretha Franklin beckons after his performance at the 2016 International Jazz Day Concert on the White House South Lawn

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Aretha Franklin performs on stage during the premiere concert of "Clive Davis: The soundtrack of our lives" at the Tribeca Film Festival 2017 at Radio City Music Hall

Getty Images

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Aretha Franklin, Clive Davis and Barry Manilow pose for a behind-the-scenes portrait of the premiere of "Clive Davis: The Soundtrack of Our Lives" at the 2017 Tribeca Film Festival at Radio City Music Hall

Getty Images for Tribeca Film Fe

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Aretha Franklin performs at the world premiere of "Clive Davis: The soundtrack of our lives" at Radio City Music Hall at the Tribeca Film Festival 2017

Charles Sykes / Invision / AP



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Rex Features


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American soul singer Aretha Franklin in 1968

Associated journals


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Aretha Franklin performs on stage at the Elton John AIDS Foundation commemorates her 25th birthday and pays tribute to founder Sir Elton John at the fall gala in New York at St. John the Divine Cathedral in 2017

Getty Images


4/41

Aretha Franklin, with her husband and director, Ted White, in 1968



5/41

Aretha Franklin in 1967

Rex Features


6/41

American soul singer Aretha Franklin danced for cameras in 1968

Getty Images


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American soul singer Aretha Franklin in 1968

Getty Images


8/41

Aretha Franklin with host and producer Don Cornelius. Franklin was one of the many artists who played in "Soul Train" in the 1970s

Getty Images



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Portrait of American singer Aretha Franklin in 1977

Getty Images


10/41

John Belushi, Aretha Franklin and Dan Aykroyd in "The Blues Brothers" (1980)

Rex Features


11/41

American singer Aretha Franklin, the "first woman of the soul" in 1980

Getty Images


12/41

Legendary soul singer Aretha Franklin (center), shown in an undated photo with former backup vocalists Pamela Vincent, (left) Margaret Branch (center, back) and Brenda Corbet

Reuters



13/41

Rod Stewart performing with soul star Aretha Franklin and actor Dustin Hoffman. New York in 1993


14/41

Aretha Franklin repeats with Blues Brother at Radio City Music Hall in New York for the 40th Grammy Awards

EPA


15/41

Aretha Franklin at the Grammy Awards 1994

Rex Features


16/41

Opera singer Luciano Pavarotti laughs with singer Aretha Franklin and the Boyz II Men band (behind) after receiving the MusiCares Foundation's eighth annual "People of the Year" award in New York in 1998

AFP / Getty Images



17/41

Aretha Franklin in "Blues Brothers 2000" (1998)

© Universal


18/41

Aretha Franklin poses with blues brothers John Goodman (left), J.Evan Bonifant (2nd from left), Joe Morton (2nd from right) and Dan Aykroyd (right) after playing the 40th Grammy Awards at Radio City Music Hall in New York

AFP


19/41

Sting and Aretha Franklin accept the Grammy Legend Award for Luciano Pavarotti at the 40th Grammy Awards

AP


20/41

Legendary record artist Aretha Franklin performs at the 1999 Daytime Emmy Awards at Madison Square Garden in New York

AP



21/41

Aretha Franklin performs on stage at the Clive Davis Pre-Grammy Gala at the Regency Hotel's Grand Ballroom in 2003

Getty Images


22/41

Aretha Franklin (left) and Hugh Jackman sing "Somewhere" from the clbadic musical "West Side Story" at the 59th annual Tony Awards at the American Theater Wing at Radio City Music Hall, New York, in 2005


23/41

George W. Bush, President of the United States, presents singer Aretha Franklin with the Presidential Medal of Freedom at a ceremony held in the East Room of the White House in 2005

AP


24/41

Aretha Franklin sings at the funeral of human rights activist Rosa Parks in Detroit, Michigan, in 2005

Reuters



25/41

Aretha Franklin gestures to crowd during opening ceremonies at Berklee College of Music in 2006

AP


26/41

Aretha Franklin arrives at the Sony BMG Post Grammy Party in Beverly Hills in 2008

Reuters


27/41

Aretha Franklin arrives for the MusiCares 2008 Personality Award

EPA


28/41

Aretha Franklin performs at the swearing-in ceremony at the US Capitol in Washington in 2009

AP



29/41

Aretha Franklin and Tony Bennett perform on stage at Tony Bennett's 85th Anniversary Gala for the Exploration of the Arts at the Metropolitan Opera House in 2011

Getty Images


30/41

Aretha Franklin sits with Reverend Jesse Jackson at the NBA basketball game between the Detroit Pistons and the Miami Heat in Auburn Hills, Michigan in 2011

Reuters


31/41

Aretha Franklin (left) and Elton John attend Tony Bennett's 85th Anniversary Gala for the Exploration of the Arts at the Metropolitan Opera House in 2011

Getty Images


32/41

Aretha Franklin makes an encore with Ronald Isley and Dennis Edwards at the Roll Hall of Fame in tribute to Aretha Franklin, the 16th tribute to the American Music Masters at PlayhouseSquare's State Theater in 2011

Getty Images



33/41

Aretha Franklin performs at BET Honors 2012 at Warner Theater

Getty Images


34/41

Lifetime Achievement Award winner Aretha Franklin performs at the Thelonious Monk International Jazz Drumming Competition and the gala concert at the Kennedy Center in Washington, DC in 2012

Getty Images


35/41

Aretha Franklin and Clive Davis attend the 11th annual Keep a Child Alive Black Ball at the Hammerstein Ballroom in 2014

Getty Images


36/41

Aretha Franklin wipes her tears by standing next to the Chilean author, Isabel Allende, left, and the former New York Mayor, Michael Bloomberg, right, at the inauguration ceremonies of Harvard University in 2014.

AP



37/41

Aretha Franklin performs on stage at the Elton John AIDS Foundation commemorates her 25th birthday and pays tribute to founder Sir Elton John at the fall gala in New York at St. John the Divine Cathedral in 2017

Getty Images


38/41

Aretha Franklin beckons after his performance at the 2016 International Jazz Day Concert on the White House South Lawn

Getty Images


39/41

Aretha Franklin performs on stage during the premiere concert of "Clive Davis: The soundtrack of our lives" at the Tribeca Film Festival 2017 at Radio City Music Hall

Getty Images


40/41

Aretha Franklin, Clive Davis and Barry Manilow pose for a behind-the-scenes portrait of the premiere of "Clive Davis: The Soundtrack of Our Lives" at the 2017 Tribeca Film Festival at Radio City Music Hall

Getty Images for Tribeca Film Fe



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Aretha Franklin performs at the world premiere of "Clive Davis: The soundtrack of our lives" at Radio City Music Hall at the Tribeca Film Festival 2017

Charles Sykes / Invision / AP

Christmas card of a whore in Minneapolis by Tom Waits

If most Christmas songs are supposed to give listeners a warm, soft feeling, then … well, it's just the opposite. Tom Waits' drunk and grizzly grunt does not absorb all the gaiety of the season and the resounding piano that he sings on this piece has a slippery resignation feeling – a composed air, when he braided it with a morose interpretation of Silent Night. The lyrics tell the story of a prostitute who, via a Christmas card, writes to "Charlie" to tell him about his life. At first, everything looks rosy: she has a boyfriend and has kicked into drugs. But shortly after she leaves the act and tells the truth about her deplorable state. It stems from something that many of us might be tempted to experience at this time of year: the loneliness and expectation of the song contrast sharply with the unbridled, force-fed joy of the season.

It was the worst Christmas of my life! by Sufjan Stevens

For years, Sufjan Stevens made folk recordings of his favorite Christmas songs and gave them to friends and family. In 2006, he decided to share them with the world, by grouping 62 songs and distributing them in a box of five CDs. There are covers of clbadics, from Amazing Grace to The Little Drummer Boy, all really fresh and enjoyable. There are also many originals, including "It's the worst Christmas of all time!", Which is probably what stands out, a gloomy, yet warm reflection of his childhood.

Santa Tell Me by Ariana Grande

First of all: We know that tagging a song with more than 150 million views on YouTube as "underestimated" seems slightly ridiculous, but listen to us. When he released in 2014 as a single single, he has largely escaped control, not even one of the top 40 American charts – and yet, it is not considered one of Ariana Grande's best songs. A parody, because it's a real banger, with its instrumental R & B and contagious earworm melodies. Forget Mariah this Christmas and hit Ari a bit.

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