The Soulful Strings were without a doubt the hippest project ever to emerge from the '60s with the word "Strings" in it's name. Brainchild of producer/arranger/bassist/songwriter (and genius) Richard Evans, the group was a far cry from the interchangeable outfits that flourished during the "beautiful music" era; instead, The Soulful Strings were actually composed of members of the Chess/Cadet label house band, including flautist Lennie Druss, guitarist Phil Upchurch, bassist/cellist Cleveland Eaton and harpist Dorothy Ashby, who laid down a tasty electric groove into which Evans stirred lush strings and unusual instrumentation like the kalimba and sitar. The result was a sound that resided at the crossroads of easy listening, jazz, R&B and exotica-and, as one might expect from that description, every Soulful Strings release (they made seven albums) is treasured by cratediggers worldwide. This 1968 release was their highest charting record at #35 on the charts, and appears on CD for the first time anywhere in the world, with liner notes by Gene Sculatti. The soundtrack to many a swingin' '60s Christmas party.
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1 The Little Drummer Boy the Soulful Strings 5:16
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2 Snowfall the Soulful Strings 3:18
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3 Dance of the Sugarplum Fairy the Soulful Strings 3:24
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4 Deck the Halls the Soulful Strings 4:35
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5 Santa Claus Is Coming the Soulful Strings 3:00
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6 Sleigh Ride the Soulful Strings 2:43
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7 Merry Christmas Baby the Soulful Strings 2:43
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8 Jingle Bells the Soulful Strings 3:30
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9 The Christmas Song the Soulful Strings 3:34
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10 Parade of the Wooden Soldiers the Soulful Strings 3:32
The Soulful Strings were without a doubt the hippest project ever to emerge from the '60s with the word "Strings" in it's name. Brainchild of producer/arranger/bassist/songwriter (and genius) Richard Evans, the group was a far cry from the interchangeable outfits that flourished during the "beautiful music" era; instead, The Soulful Strings were actually composed of members of the Chess/Cadet label house band, including flautist Lennie Druss, guitarist Phil Upchurch, bassist/cellist Cleveland Eaton and harpist Dorothy Ashby, who laid down a tasty electric groove into which Evans stirred lush strings and unusual instrumentation like the kalimba and sitar. The result was a sound that resided at the crossroads of easy listening, jazz, R&B and exotica-and, as one might expect from that description, every Soulful Strings release (they made seven albums) is treasured by cratediggers worldwide. This 1968 release was their highest charting record at #35 on the charts, and appears on CD for the first time anywhere in the world, with liner notes by Gene Sculatti. The soundtrack to many a swingin' '60s Christmas party.