Merry Christmas: 30th Anniversary Edition (Remastered) Mariah Carey

Album info

Album-Release:
2024

HRA-Release:
06.12.2024

Label: Columbia/Legacy

Genre: Vocal

Subgenre: Vocal Pop

Artist: Mariah Carey

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 Silent Night 03:39
  • 2 All I Want for Christmas Is You 03:59
  • 3 O Holy Night 04:27
  • 4 Christmas (Baby Please Come Home) 02:33
  • 5 Miss You Most (At Christmas Time) 04:32
  • 6 Joy to the World 04:18
  • 7 Jesus Born on This Day 03:41
  • 8 Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town 03:24
  • 9 Hark! The Herald Angels Sing / Gloria (In Excelsis Deo) 02:59
  • 10 Jesus Oh What a Wonderful Child 04:26
  • 11 God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen 01:19
  • 12 All I Want for Christmas Is You (Live at The Cathedral of St. John The Divine (Remastered 2024)) 05:05
  • 13 Silent Night (Live at The Cathedral of St. John The Divine (Remastered 2024)) 03:44
  • 14 Joy to the World (Live at The Cathedral of St. John The Divine (Remastered 2024)) 05:39
  • 15 Hark! The Herald Angels Sing / Gloria (In Excelsis Deo) (Live at The Cathedral of St. John The Divine (Remastered 2024)) 03:03
  • 16 Jesus Born On This Day (Live at The Cathedral of St. John The Divine (Remastered 2024)) 03:45
  • 17 Santa Claus Is Comin' to Town (Live at The Cathedral of St. John The Divine (Remastered 2024)) 02:56
  • 18 Hero (Live at The Cathedral of St. John The Divine (Remastered 2024)) 04:24
  • 19 Miss You Most (At Christmas Time) (Video Version (Remastered 2024)) 04:31
  • Total Runtime 01:12:24

Info for Merry Christmas: 30th Anniversary Edition (Remastered)



Mariah Carey didn't become the Queen of Christmas just because of her fervent love of the holiday. Or as the result of a brilliant marketing plan. The iconic singer earned her title by way of her blockbuster Merry Christmas, a 1994 album that quickly joined the likes of Bing Crosby's White Christmas, A Jolly Christmas from Frank Sinatra, and Nat King Cole's The Christmas Song as an all-time holiday vocal classic. Featuring a balanced mix of inspired originals and well-chosen covers, Carey's fourth studio record has only grown in stature as new generations discover its magic. Mobile Fidelity's 30th anniversary edition reissue of Merry Christmas makes her spellbinding performances and upper-tier register come alive like never before.

Mastered from the original master tape and housed in mini-LP-style packaging, the pioneering label's numbered-edition Hybrid SACD of Merry Christmas plays with riveting detail, depth, and dimensionality. Available in audiophile quality for the first time since its original release three decades ago, and featuring the bonus track "God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen," the nine-times-platinum set breathes with a newfound transparency that enhances the spirituality, passion, and festive tenor of Carey's singing.

The music takes on a heightened energy and anticipatory emotion synonymous with the holiday season. Carey's signature vocals explode with liveliness and dynamics, the full scope of her acrobatic range presented in clear, transparent sound that practically places her on a small stage in your listening room. This collectible version also breathes with the kind of warmth, intimacy, and coziness you want from a landmark vocal album.

Recorded when Carey helped put "diva" back into everyone's vocabulary, Merry Christmas gave the New York native another smash right out of the box. What nobody knew at the time was the degree of the album's staying power — and how, many years removed from its initial promotion cycle, its legend would still grow and even spark a 2010 sequel. Having re-entered the Top 200 charts every year since 2019, Merry Christmas ranks as one of the three most commercially successful holiday LPs ever made and, in due time, will likely earn the top distinction in that class. A global blockbuster, it seamlessly ties together Christian, gospel, and secular threads and speaks to a boundless audience, independent of denomination.

Most obviously, the record remains inescapably connected to "All I Want for Christmas Is You," an uptempo anthem that towers as a holiday standard and one of the biggest-selling singles in history. Punctuated with celesta chimes, sleigh bells, springy keyboards, and joyous beats, the song echoes the simple albeit engaging melodies and doo-wop style of beloved holiday classics of yore — and blends such elements with contagious dance-pop rhythms to create an atmosphere rich in joy, wonder, and excitement. Radiant with golden soulfulness and sincere conviction, Carey's exuberant singing and on-point phrasing put it all over the top. And how.

The song stands as the only effort in Billboard history to top the Hot 100 chart during at least three separate runs. Carey's blockbuster has already hit No. 1 during five runs, spanning every year between 2019 and 2024. That's just one of the many records the singer holds — and only one of the multiple highlights from Merry Christmas, which includes two other Carey-penned originals, "Miss You Most (At Christmas Time)" and "Jesus Born on This Day."

Though slightly lesser known, Carey's remarkable rendition of Darlene Love's "Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)" further links her album with the big, lush, Wall of Sound heritage that helped inspire its production. Carey's heartfelt take and transformation of the traditional "Santa Claus Is Coming to Town" into an animated tune that even adults can believe, as well as her clairon reading of "Joy to the World" — cleverly augmented with bits of Three Dog Night's 1971 hit of the same name — further reinforce her status as Queen of Christmas.

At the peak of her powers, Carey finds equivalent success when tapping more spiritual veins. Witness the reverence she brings to the timeless carol "Silent Night," the piousness she invests in "Jesus Oh What a Wonderful Child," and the sacred feeling she conveys throughout "O Holy Night." You'll also never think of "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing" and "Gloria (In Excelsis Deo)" the same way again after hearing Mimi pour her heart and soul into them, and pair the songs together.

Indeed, it's Carey's pliable voice, melismatic technique, and five-octave range — on display here in definitive fashion — coupled with her undeniable love for Christmas and understanding of the religious significance of the season that make Merry Christmas a must-have holiday staple.

Mariah Carey

Digitally remastered


Mariah Carey
The best-selling female performer of the 1990s and one of the most popular artists through the 2010s, Mariah Carey rose to superstardom on the strength of her stunning five-octave voice. An elastic talent who moved easily from glossy ballads to hip-hop-inspired dance-pop, she earned frequent comparison to rivals Whitney Houston and Celine Dion, but did them both one better by co-writing almost all her material. Like all artists with lengthy periods in the mainstream spotlight, Carey experienced creative and commercial lulls, yet each one of her proper studio albums peaked within the Top Five of the Billboard 200.

Born in Long Island, New York, on March 27, 1970, Carey moved to New York City at the age of 17 — just one day after graduating high school — to pursue a music career; there she befriended keyboardist Ben Margulies, with whom she began writing songs. Her big break came as a backing vocalist on a studio session with dance-pop singer Brenda K. Starr, who handed Carey's demo tape to Columbia Records head Tommy Mottola at a party. According to legend, Mottola listened to the tape in his limo while driving home that same evening, and was so immediately struck by Carey's talent that he doubled back to the party to track her down.

After signing to Columbia, Carey entered the studio to begin work on her 1990 self-titled debut LP. The heavily promoted album was a chart-topping smash, launching no less than four number one singles: "Vision of Love," "Love Takes Time," "Someday," and "I Don't Wanna Cry." Her overnight success earned Grammy Awards as Best New Artist and Best Female Vocalist, and expectations were high for Carey's follow-up, 1991's Emotions. The album did not disappoint, as the title track reached number one — a record fifth consecutive chart-topper — while both "Can't Let Go" and "Make It Happen" landed in the Top Five. Carey's next release was 1992's MTV Unplugged EP, which generated a number one cover of the Jackson 5's "I'll Be There." Featured on the track was backup singer Trey Lorenz, whose appearance immediately helped him land a recording contract of his own.

In June 1993, Carey wed Mottola — some two decades her senior — in a headline-grabbing ceremony; months later, she released her third full-length effort, Music Box, which became her best-selling record to date. Two more singles, "Dreamlover" and "Hero," reached the top spot on the charts. Carey's first tour followed and was widely panned by critics; undaunted, she resurfaced in 1994 with a holiday release titled Merry Christmas, scoring a seasonal smash with "All I Want for Christmas Is You." Released in 1995, Daydream reflected a new artistic maturity; the first single, "Fantasy," debuted at number one, making Carey the first female artist and just the second performer ever to accomplish the feat. The follow-up, "One Sweet Day" — a collaboration with Boyz II Men — repeated the trick, and remained lodged at the top of the charts for a record 16 weeks.

After separating from Mottola, Carey returned in 1997 with Butterfly, another staggering success and her most hip-hop-flavored recording to date. #1's — a collection featuring her 13 previous chart-topping singles as well as "The Prince of Egypt (When You Believe)," a duet with Whitney Houston effectively pairing the two most successful female recording artists in pop history — followed late the next year. With "Heartbreaker," the first single from her 1999 album Rainbow, Carey became the first artist to top the charts in each year of the 1990s; the record also pushed her ahead of the Beatles as the artist with the most cumulative weeks spent atop the Hot 100 singles chart.

However, the early 2000s weren't as kind to Carey. After signing an $80 million deal in 2001 with Virgin — the biggest record contract ever — she experienced a very public personal and professional meltdown that included rambling; suicidal messages on her website; an appearance on TRL where, clad only in a T-shirt, she handed out Popsicles to the audience; and last but not least, the poorly received movie Glitter and its attendant soundtrack (which was also her Virgin Records debut). The film did poorly critically as well as commercially, making just under $4 million in its total U.S. gross. Despite this, the soundtrack eventually went platinum. Following these setbacks, Virgin and Carey parted ways early in 2002, with the label paying her $28 million. That spring, she found a new home with Island/Def Jam, where she set up her own label, MonarC Music. In December, she released her ninth album, Charmbracelet, her first proper studio album to go merely platinum rather than multi-platinum.

The Emancipation of Mimi, her most successful work in years, appeared in 2005. It climbed to multi-platinum status and earned Carey three Grammy awards — Best Contemporary R&B Album and, for the single "We Belong Together," Best Female R&B Vocal Performance and Best R&B Song — thus restoring her status as a megastar. Two weeks before the release of her subsequent album, 2008's E=MC2, Carey scored her 18th number one hit with "Touch My Body," a feat that pushed her into second place (past Elvis, no less) among all artists with the most chart-topping singles. Although that hit song, along with the late April news that she married Nick Cannon, kept her in the spotlight that year, the remainder of the album's spinoffs weren't nearly as successful; only "Bye Bye" managed to scrape the Top 20 of the Billboard Hot 100. She went back to work fairly quickly, however, and Memoirs of an Imperfect Angel — featuring collaborations with the-Dream, as well as a cover of Foreigner's "I Want to Know What Love Is" — became her 12th studio album upon its 2009 release. Despite some positive reviews, Memoirs of an Imperfect Angel became Carey's least successful studio album. Only one of its singles, "Obsessed," reached the Top 10. The following year, Carey released her second Christmas album, Merry Christmas II You. She gave birth to twins in 2011. Within a year, she was performing again and judged the 12th season of American Idol. The Miguel collaboration "#Beautiful," the lead single to her next album, was released in 2013 and went platinum. Me. I Am Mariah: The Elusive Chanteuse, her first album for Def Jam, followed in 2014.

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