data-original-title=”” title=””>Edgar Meyer—see Perpetual Motion (Sony Classical, 2001) among others—supplants regular ‘Tones’ bassist

Victor Wooten


data-original-title=”” title=””>Victor Wooten on that track. A comparable twist involves the selection of

Joni Mitchell
Joni Mitchell

vocals
b.1943


data-original-title=”” title=””>Joni Mitchell‘s “River” as the closer for this 61 minute-plus album: something of a contemporary Christmas standard, this cull from Blue (Reprise, 1971) is indicative of this ensemble’s unpredictable thinking, especially insofar as it is played on simultaneously on piano and banjo by

Bela Fleck


data-original-title=”” title=””>Bela Fleck.

And the song’s roots in “Jingle Bells” renders it of a piece with the musical chestnuts juxtaposed with it on this record, including two selections from

Vince Guaraldi
Vince Guaraldi

piano
1928 – 1976


data-original-title=”” title=””>Vince Guaraldi‘s soundtracks to ‘Charlie Brown.’ animations: Bela and company evince sincere affection in playing “Christmas Time Is Here” plus “Linus And Lucy.” 

Likewise, the unself-conscious participation of the
data-original-title=”” title=””>Alash Ensemble
, a multi-instrumental unit of throat-singers from Tuva, Russia. Their exotic vocals open the album in a most ear-catching fashion, but it is the panning of their voices at the end of the aforementioned “12 Days” that is emblematic of the meticulous attention to sound that compelled the remastering by Richard Dodd and Paul Blakemore, from its original mix by Fleck with Robert and Richard Battaglia.

While there is really no extensive improvisation over the course of these 16 tracks, there is a tangible element of spontaneity running throughout the LP and most obviously so on “Danse of the Sugar Plum Fairies.” Not surprisingly, this is a joint arrangement of the Tchaikovsky composition by the four core bandmembers, a clear illustration of how, without taking themselves or their work too seriously, they consistently produce work equal parts moving and enduring. 

Like most entries in the Bela Fleck discography—with and without the Flecktones—Jingle All The Way conjures an air so joyful it is worth playing any month or season, not just at ‘the most wonderful time of the year.’                                  


“>

Track Listing

Jingle Bells; Silent Night’ Sleigh Ride; The Christmas Song; The Twelve Days of
Christmas; J.S. Bach’s Christmas Oratorio— BWV 248: # 41 “Ich will nur zu Ehren
leben”; Christmas Time is Here; Linus and Lucy; Jingle Bells (reprise); The Hanukkah
Waltz; Danse of the Sugar Plum Fairies; What Child is This/Dyngyldai; O Come All Ye
Faithful; Medley; Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas; River.

Personnel

Additional Instrumentation

Béla Fleck: electric banjo, piano; Jeff Coffin: flute, bass clarinet; Andy Statman:
clarinet; Alash Ensemble: igil, doshpuluur, byzaanchy, kengirge and shyngyrash;
Sean Quirk: Tuvan throat singing.

Album information

Title: Jingle All The Way

| Year Released: 2025
| Record Label: Thirty Tigers

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