Chicago Christmas: What's It Gonna Be, Santa? is actually a retitled reissue of
Chicago's 1998 album
Chicago 25: The Christmas Album with six newly recorded extra tracks, bringing the running time up near 75 minutes.
Chicago 25 was a gold record seller, and after the band sold its catalog to
Rhino Records in 2002 and that label began releasing expanded reissues of the back catalog, the idea of adding to the holiday album came up. It wasn't a bad record to begin with, one on which the
Chicago style was applied to seasonal standards. As ever, the group was a cooperative unit, with the three lead singers --
Robert Lamm,
Bill Champlin, and
Jason Scheff -- taking turns on the different songs, arranged by various bandmembers and always allowing for generous contributions by the horn players
Lee Loughnane,
James Pankow, and
Walt Parazaider. The songs were all old favorites except for
Loughnane and
John Durrill's
"Child's Prayer," featuring a choir dominated by the musicians' children, which sounded so much like a Middle Ages English hymn that it fit right in. Highlights included a particularly moving vocal on
"Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" by the gruff-voiced
Champlin, a wonderful doubled flute passage by
Parazaider on
"O Come All Ye Faithful," and a rare lead vocal by
Loughnane on
"Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!" But the whole album, pristinely produced by
E Street Band pianist
Roy Bittan, was well performed. It sounded exactly like you would expect a
Chicago Christmas album to sound, and if you liked the band and holiday music, you'd like the record, too. Now, there's just a little more of it, including a rocking version of
"Jolly Old St. Nicholas" with new lyrics referring to the bandmembers; two more
Loughnane lead vocals on
"Bethlehem" and
"Sleigh Ride"; and
Champlin turning
"Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer" into an R&B tour de force.
Bittan may not have been available for the new sessions, but drafting in
Phil Ramone as producer wasn't too shabby as replacements go. ~ William Ruhlmann