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On a set of mostly seasonal standards, Lee Ann Womack goes deeper into the fully orchestrated pop of her recent albums, further distancing herself from the country chanteuse she once was. In keeping with its title, the beautiful The Season for Romance is replete with lush string arrangements and dreamy orchestral arrangements worthy of Nelson Riddle or Gordon Jenkins. Womack's version of Irving Berlin's "White Christmas" is a marvel of reinvention, as its layered strings and evocative woodwinds buttress her torchy reading. A small combo with strings cooks up a cozy, easygoing shuffle for her blues-inflected take on "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas," but a medley of "Let It Snow/Winter Wonderland" gets a big, brassy, Billy Maystyle arrangement as Womack swings the lyric gracefully while investing it with a chipper attitude. Harry Connick Jr. joins the festivities on a sensuous, swirling version of "Baby It's Cold Outside," on which the artists' frisky repartee is anything but cold -- there's heat here, low key and warm, well worthy of a return engagement somewhere down the line. Rich and mellifluous, the pop-blues of "Forever Christmas Eve" offers a dollop of wishful thinking about time standing still at a moment of perfect bliss. And in the season for romance, what better way to sign off than with a big-hearted, classic pop treatment of "What Are You Doing New Year's Eve," Frank Loesser's philosophical exhortation to go for it when the pheromones kick in. Short and sweet, The Season for Romance gets its message across in memorable fashion. David McGee, Barnes & Noble