Published on Dec 19, 2001
I make no secret about the fact I get a lot of music in the mail
each year – so much so, in fact, that I am so far behind with my
reviews that it would take me a month of Sundays to even make a
dent in the pile. In those mailings, there are a select number of
artists whose new discs jump from the envelope directly to my CD
player, and I can count the times I do this on both hands.
One such case is Yes Virginia, the Wilmington, Delaware-based
band led by bassist Paul Janocha, whose independent Christmas
albums are like a special gift I get in the mail each year right
before the big day. It’s been interesting listening to Yes Virginia
grow as a band, both in their musical ability and the rounding out
of their sound, especially since the addition of keyboardist Mario
Padovani. Even though I thought last year’s
O Holy Night disc slipped a little, there was more than
enough for me to make this disc a treasured part of my
collection.
Yes Virginia welcomes a new member to the band for their latest
offering
My Favorite Things – namely, drummer Gregg Hoffman. (Former
drummer Mac Hines, who apparently fell into a deep depression after
my comments about his work in my review of
O Holy Night, died in a mysterious bathtub accident. Weird,
since I always thought he was afraid of water.) Hoffman proves to
be an excellent fit with the band, and if these four songs are a
sign of things to come (a full-length disc is promised in 2002),
people may forget about groups like Mannheim Steamroller and
Trans-Siberian Orchestra. Simply put, this is Yes Virginia’s best
work.
The shift of the spotlight has been slowly occurring in the
band, much in the same way that guitarist Joe Merkel has been
expanding the horizons of his playing. On
My Favorite Things, the spotlight is equally shared by
Merkel and Padovani – and it is Padovani who seems to be one of the
two keys which is really making this band click. The second is
Hoffman, whose drumming seems to breathe new life into the sound…
now, all Janocha and Padovani have to do is raise Hoffman’s volume
a notch in the final mix.
The disc opens on a very somber note, with an almost dirge-like
“Silent Night”. While it does take a moment to get used to what’s
happening in the song (the first time I listened to it and heard a
foghorn-like effect on the keyboards, I thought there was a problem
with the disc), the sparse arrangement allows the listener a good
moment of introspection while underlining the seriousness of the
song. (My only suggestion: possibly using an electric-acoustic on
this one might have given the track an extra punch.)
The two other instrumentals, “My Favorite Things” and “Silver
Bells,” show me just how much this band has matured since I first
heard them in 1999. The rhythm section of Janocha and Hoffman is
incredibly tight, and Padovani’s keyboard work rightfully takes
center stage at times. Merkel’s understated guitar work at these
times is just the right touch, and Merkel is given plenty of room
to place his own stylistic stamp on these tracks. “Silver Bells” is
such a magical track, I’ve given serious consideration to turning
it into an MP3 and e-mailing it to a station in Chicago which is
playing nothing but Christmas music this season. Yes, kids, it’s
that good.
But nothing quite prepares you for the first Yes Virginia track
with vocals, courtesy of Padovani. A reprise of “My Favorite
Things” makes me wonder why Yes Virginia hadn’t tried the vocal
approach sooner. With a style that’s a cross between Ronnie James
Dio and Joe Lynn Turner (a la Rainbow and Yngwie Malmsteen),
Padovani captures the flavor of late ’80s/early ’90s hard rock and
raises what was already a great rendition of this song to another
level all its own. Some may take note that the lyrics sound a bit
corny when delivered with an almost operatic vocal – yeah, like the
lyrics weren’t a bit banal when being sung by Mitch Miller &
The Gang.
This, of course, wouldn’t be a traditional Yes Virginia review
wthout my standard complaint – though with the transition in
drummers this time around, I can understand why
My Favorite Things is only a four-song effort. What might be
more frustrating to some people is that, at least right now, this
disc isn’t available to the general public. No, everyone else will
have to wait until Janocha and crew deliver their full-length
effort. If the music on that disc is as good as
My Favorite Things is, that’s a Christmas present I’m
willing to wait a year to open.
Janocha has been kind enough to “gift” me with Yes Virginia’s
new release each year… and I’m seriously considering “gifting”
some of the publicists and record labels I deal with, by sending
them copies of
My Favorite Things. It would be a crime against Santa
himself for some label not to pick Yes Virginia up and deliver
their music to the masses for next Christmas – and it would
probably get you on St. Nick’s “naughty” list if you didn’t buy a
copy when that happens. For now, though, Yes Virginia continues to
be quite possibly the best-kept secret in the music business –
although
My Favorite Things suggests to me that someone’s about to
announce where the real musical Christmas presents have been hiding
all this time.