The best Christmas songs are ones that can be played while sipping brown liquor.
Suggested Reading
I know, I know: the birth of Christ. I love Jesus, too; still, the holiday season overlaps with cuffing season, and with all that cold weather and love in the air, you are likely to spend your time either drinking eggnog while laid up with the one you love or sipping something dark and flavorful contemplating why youโre alone on Christmas Eve. Musical artists know thisโthat is why there is an embarrassment of riches when it comes to brown-liquor Christmas songs.
As I stated before, in order for a track to qualify as a โbrown liquorโ song, it must meet certain criteria:
It must have a pronounced bass line.
This bass line must be contrasted with an ethereal harmony.
The sonic tension between these juxtapositions must evoke a mood that is either libidinous or mournful in nature.
Yet for it to qualify as a brown-liquor Christmas song, it must do Nos. 1 to 3 while also commenting upon or utilizing symbols of the holiday season. This can be done by a) turning a traditional Christmas song into a brown-liquor song (see: the Temptationsโ โSilent Nightโ); b) taking a symbol of Christmas and using it in playful and libidinous ways (see: Clarence Carterโs โBack Door Santaโ); or c) using Christmas as a setting to lament the one who got away (see: Lutherโs โEvery Year, Every Christmasโ).
Many Christmas songs qualify, but below, I present to you the 10 best brown-liquor Christmas songs of all time, ranked.
This is a soulful and jazzy cover of the Johnny Mooreโs Three Blazers classic. Itโs perfect background music for when you have friends over and youโre mixing up amaretto sours.
Iโm a jazz snob. I donโt do the cheap, elevator-music-adjacent Kenny G bastardization of the black-American art form. If it doesnโt push the boundaries of melody, then you can miss me with your whitewashed, sweet-white-wine shenanigans. โMy Favorite Thingsโ by โTrane is a 13-minute encounter with the divine. It is a masterpiece and perfect with a hot buttered bourbon.
Even Santa has needs. This raunchy jawn is your crazy uncleโs second-favorite Christmas song. He drinks Jim Beam out the bottle while he listens to it.
Lutherโs voice was one of a kind. โIntimate,โ โsultryโ and โvelvetyโ donโt do it justice, and his voice is on full display as he sings about how the holiday is a source of pain because his lover is not with him. Sip this with Crown Royal and ginger ale. Be sure you donโt get tears in the glass.
This is a quiet, mournful jazz standard written by composer Alec Wilder and trumpeter Thad Jones. On this cover, Peterson improvises on the melody, filling out the sonic landscape of the song in ways that make it both soulful and melancholic. Watch the snowfall as you listen to this and drink a Swedish glogg.
This is the official Christmas song of juke joints and liquor houses everywhere. Charles Brownโs vocalizations put one in the mood to sip something brown and aged while yearning for the one who got away. Pair this with a Macallan 18-year, straight, no chaser.
The Temptationsโ rendition of this Christmas classic is a soulful blend of the sacred and the secular. Listening to Glenn Leonard makes me do the ugly church face ubiquitous in black houses of worship. This is your spiked-apple-cider song.
Christmas is in winter, and winter is cuffing season. I contend that โLet It Snowโ is the definitive sexy Christmas song. โThe market is full of widely recognized artists singing the usual classics,โ says Elon Dancy, professor of education and associate dean for community engagement and academic inclusion at the University of Oklahoma. He is a scholar world-renowned for his research into black men in higher education but is also an underappreciated cultural critic. He continues, โHowever, one of the special contributions of Christmas Interpretations is that the majority of the album is original Christmas music โฆ it is musical velvet.โ Keep warm as this plays by sipping a spiked hot chocolate.
On this track, Carter is petty, trifling and brilliant. Thatโs why this is your crazy uncleโs favorite Christmas song. He gets fancy, says, โWhat you young bucks know โbout dis right cha,โ and drinks Courvoisier out of a snifter as he grooves to this.
Much has been said about this track, so I will just stress to you how strongly I feel that this is the official Christmas song of black folks everywhere. This joint is suitable for every occasion and pairs with any drink. Yet I choose to enjoy it with Johnnie Walker Blueโbecause Iโm bougie.
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