This edition in
Universal's discount-priced compilation series
20th Century Masters/The Christmas Collection is actually a re-titled reissue of the 2001 collection
A Christmas Celebration of Hope. It took
B.B. King a long time to get around to his first
Christmas album, which didn't appear until about half a century into his recording career. It's an adequate, good-humored reprisal of various holiday chestnuts, among them some material with
blues/
R&B origins, like
"Merry Christmas Baby." King wrote just one new song for the album, the instrumental
"Christmas Love," though he did originally record another of the tracks,
"Christmas Celebration," back in 1960. Wisely he plays
"Auld Lang Syne" as a funky instrumental instead of vocalizing the singalong lyrics. In addition to periodic bursts of
King's trademark guitar, there is plenty of brass and organ in the peppy arrangements. The
Nashville String Machine adds its strings to just three tracks, which cuts down on over-produced excess (which is only a problem on
"Please Come Home for Christmas"). It's hardly the first
King you'll pull off your shelf, and not the first
R&B Christmas album you'll turn to, either, but you could do worse in the holiday season. ~ Richie Unterberger