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Camp Holiday

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Download links and information about Camp Holiday by Martin Sexton. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Rock, Traditional Pop Music, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 34:46 minutes.

Artist: Martin Sexton
Release date: 2005
Genre: Rock, Traditional Pop Music, Alternative, Songwriter/Lyricist, Contemporary Folk
Tracks: 12
Duration: 34:46
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. I'll Be Home for Christmas 2:53
2. Holly Jolly Christmas 2:19
3. Blue Christmas 3:34
4. Little Drummer Boy 4:25
5. White Christmas 2:24
6. Silent Night 2:52
7. Do You Hear What I Hear? 4:53
8. O Christmas Tree 2:44
9. Welcome to the Camp 2:13
10. Silver Bells 2:36
11. Auld Lang Syne 2:29
12. Let There Be Peace On Earth 1:24

Details

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The liner notes say this collection of Christmas songs was "unproduced by Martin Sexton and Crit Harmon," and that line goes a long way toward explaining its charm. While Martin Sexton has a well-earned reputation as a performer with energy and passion to spare, Camp Holiday is a loose and relaxed acoustic session that sounds like a friendly guitar pull taking place in your living room, with a few mugs of well-spiked egg nog within easy reach and even a few relatives on hand chiming in with backing vocals (most notably Sexton's dad, who pops up on two tracks). While the bluesy force of Sexton's voice is on full display here, especially on "O Christmas Tree" and "Blue Christmas," he makes a point of not overwhelming his material (all covers except for one new number, the sly and funky "Welcome to the Camp"), and there's a homey warmth and good humor to this album that speaks of the relaxed familiarity of a good Christmas get-together. Since this is the first release from Martin Sexton in three years, some fans may have had higher hopes for Camp Holiday than just a casual collection of yuletide favorites, but while this is a very low-key album, it's also the sort of Christmas album that is likely to appeal to even the cynical — it's short on showy piety and sentimentality and long on simple good vibes, and will still be in rotation around your house long after Kenny G. and Mannheim Steamroller have worn out their welcome.