Christmas Eve with Johnny Mathis is the fourth Christmas album by American pop singer Johnny Mathis that was released on September 23, 1986,[1] by Columbia Records. This was Mathis's fourth holiday-themed LP and focused exclusively on secular material.
The album spent a week on Billboard magazine's Christmas Albums chart in the issue dated December 12, 1992,[6] (no such chart was published in 1986)[7] and two weeks on its Top Pop Catalog Albums chart in December 1994.[6]
The recording of "Jingle Bells" on this release is subtitled "(Let's Take a Sleigh Ride)" on the front and back covers of the album jacket.[3] (The CD booklet does not include song titles on the cover.) The track opens with background vocalists singing, "Let's take a sleigh ride, a merry sleigh ride," and the subtitle is inserted into each refrain of the chorus. Although no credit for additional lyrics is cited, the credit for the arranger of this rendition, Ray Ellis, is listed with the songwriter's name on the LP label.[3]
The album's opener, "It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas", was featured in the 1992 holiday release Home Alone 2: Lost in New York[8] and included on its original soundtrack album.[9] In the issue of Billboard dated November 28, 2009, the list of the "Top 10 Holiday Songs (Since 2001)" places the Mathis recording at number 10.[10]
People magazine's reviewer, Ralph Novak, describes Mathis's singing on the album as "characteristically smooth, yet never very engaged", and feels that the arrangements "tend to big stringy orchestrations that are too much for intimacy and not passionate enough for majesty."[5]
Medley – 5:09 a. "Christmas Is for Everyone" (Richard Loring, Dorothy Wayne) b. "Where Can I Find Christmas?" from The Bear Who Slept Through Christmas (Doug Goodwin)
^ ab(2014) The Classic Christmas Album by Johnny Mathis [CD booklet]. New York: Columbia Records 88843091032.
^ ab(2017) The Voice of Romance: The Columbia Original Album Collection by Johnny Mathis [CD booklet]. New York: Sony Music Entertainment 88985 36892 2.
^ abcdefg(1986) Christmas Eve with Johnny Mathis by Johnny Mathis [album jacket]. New York: Columbia Records FC 40447.
^(1954) "White Christmas/The Christmas Waltz" by Frank Sinatra [78 RPM disc label]. Los Angeles: Capitol Records CL 14174.
^Williams, Andy. Interviewed by Karen Herman. Archive of American Television, A Program of the Television Academy Foundation. emmytvlegends.org, 19 September 2005. Retrieved 2 March 2014.
^(1963) The Andy Williams Christmas Album by Andy Williams [album label]. New York: Columbia Records CS 8887.
^"Mame". ibdb.com. The Broadway League. Archived from the original on 24 March 2014. Retrieved 2 March 2014.
^(1985) Santa Claus: The Movie – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack by various artists [album jacket]. Los Angeles: EMI America Records SJ-17177