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In 1993, Alan Jackson struck a blow for the old school with Honky Tonk Christmas, a bopping celebration in the spirit of its title. Nine years later, he returns to the Yuletide theme with Let It Be Christmas, but this time he casts ten seasonal standards, and one exceptional original tune, in the style of the Great American Songbook, with string-laden orchestral arrangements, by turns swinging and soothing, and a cooing background chorus. Singing with conviction and emotion, Jackson gets the most out of his sturdy baritone, which loses none of its country flavor in the midst of these pop arrangements, making for a most scintillating musical blend. You'd have to go back to Elvis Sings the Wonderful World of Christmas for a more moving interpretation of "O Come, All Ye Faithful." "Jingle Bells" gets some glide in its stride via a swinging big-band arrangement out of the '40s, and Jackson even gives Nat King Cole's definitive treatment of "The Christmas Song" a run for its money with a vocal that radiates warmth and bonhomie (with kudos to keyboardist extraordinaire Matt Rollings for his tasty, jazz-inflected piano accompaniment). Jackson's lilting, country-flavored original, "Let It Be Christmas," expresses hope that the holiday spirit will endure beyond December 25th: "Let it be Christmas everywhere/Let Heavenly music fill the air/Let anger and fear disappear/Let there be love that lasts through the year." It's an instant holiday classic -- the first such in years -- and the album as a whole belongs in that category as well. David McGee, Barnes & Noble