We Three Kings is an album by the American folk trio the Roches, released in 1990.[3][4] It is a collection of Christmas songs.[5][6] The sisters wrote two of the album's 24 tracks.[7]We Three Kings is considered a classic of unconventional Christmas music.[8][9][10][11]
MCA Records allowed the album to go out of print; it was reissued by Rykodisc in 1994, after the label had signed the trio.[12][13] For years, the sisters performed selections of the songs at their annual Bottom Line shows.[14][15]
Production
The album was produced by the Roches and Jeffrey Lesser.[16] It marked a return to the sisters' roots, as they had first sung together as carolers in Manhattan.[17][18] Due to their familiarity with the carols, the sisters did many of the songs in one take.[19]We Three Kings was recorded in New York City during a July 1990 heat wave; the sessions were slightly delayed while Maggie Roche got over laryngitis.[20][21]
Most of the tracks are sung a cappella; it took the Roches six weeks to obtain the vocal strength to get through "For Unto Us a Child Is Born".[22][23] "Star of Wonder", written by Terre Roche, was composed after a friend died in the Lockerbie bombing.[24]Suzzy Roche wrote "Christmas Passing Through".[25] "Winter Wonderland" is sung using stereotypical New Jersey accents; "Frosty the Snowman" employs a chorus of children.[26][27] Other songs incorporate elements of Middle Eastern music and Caribbean music.[28]
The Globe and Mail thought that "the avant-garde folkies play it pretty straight this time out, using their sisterly harmonies to wade through a generous selection of Christmas favorites."[36]Newsday stated that the Roches "adorn two dozen yuletide standards with their trademark harmonies, skating vocal figure-eights around each other with the navigability of Dancer, Prancer and Vixen."[37]
The St. Petersburg Times deemed the album "wonderful listening" and "an instant classic."[38]The Boston Globe determined that "the sometimes silly sisters take their tongue out of their collective cheek and come up with a classic."[39] The Windsor Star noted that "We Three Kings, while containing the obvious, is definitely not-so-obvious in its arrangements."[35]
AllMusic wrote that, "when they put their formidable vocal chops to work on tunes as potentially complex as 'Angels We Have Heard on High' and 'The Holly and the Ivy',' the results can be as gorgeous as they are unique."[29]The Rolling Stone Album Guide concluded that the album "finds the group returning to its (true) roots as seasonal carolers in Greenwich Village."[32]The Times called the title track "lushly gothic, augmented with a tender oboe and, yup, restless country guitars ... The swooning 'Oooohh' that leads up to the chorus is utterly thrilling."[40] The Seattle Post-Intelligencer deemed it "a perfect showcase for the trio's crystal-clear harmonies and offhand humor."[33] Reviewing the 1994 reissue, the Rocky Mountain News opined: "No doubt about it: We Three Kings may well be the best holiday album of the year."[41]
^Bledsoe, Wayne (14 July 2006). "Sibiling harmony: Sisters' unique blend charms critics, fans". Preview. Knoxville News Sentinel. p. 5.
^"Roches Holiday Twist". Entertainment. New Jersey Herald. December 6, 2012.
^Ross, Curtis (December 21, 2007). "The Roches Bring Harmony to Holidays". Friday Extra. The Tampa Tribune. p. 15.
^Smith, Andy (March 15, 1996). "Roches have to work at family harmony". The Providence Journal. p. E1.
^Wilonsky, Robert (December 8, 1994). "Chestnuts and lumps of coal - Bennett, Buttholes, and John Tesh—these are a few of our favorite, and least favorite, things". Music. Dallas Observer.
^Germain, David (February 29, 1996). "Roches Remain 'Weird Sisters' of Folk-Pop". Times Union. Associated Press. p. P3.
^Conan, Neal (December 9, 1994). "Neal Conan Interviews Two of the Roches". Morning Edition. NPR.
^"Roche Motets". The New Yorker. Vol. 70, no. 43. December 26, 1994. p. 20.
^Waldman, Amy (26 Apr 1991). "Eclectic Roches crawl all over the musical spectrum". The Milwaukee Journal. p. D1.
^Ayers, Anne (26 Nov 1990). "The Roches, We Three Kings". USA Today. p. 5D.
^Rawls, Alex (November 30, 2006). "Roches' reunion one that sounds just right". Entertainment. The San Diego Union-Tribune. p. 22.
^Valois, Diana (14 Dec 1990). "Listening Easy to Bright Sound of Christmas". The Morning Call. p. D1.
^Okamoto, David (December 7, 1990). "Musical Mistletoe – Newest Christmas albums embrace romance of holiday in quirky as well as traditional renditions". Scene. The Gazette-Telegraph. p. 1.
^Widner, Ellis (November 30, 1990). "Here we go a-caroling – Roches do songs for season". Tulsa World. p. 1B.
^Holden, Stephen (19 Dec 1990). "The Roches' Noel". The New York Times. p. C19.
^ abErskine, Evelyn (9 Nov 1990). "The Roches We Three Kings". Ottawa Citizen. p. D8.
^Kornelis, Chris (20 Dec 2018). "Beyond Bing — Christmas music for people who are getting tired of Christmas music". The Wall Street Journal. p. A15.
^Boren, Ray; Wadley, Carma (December 14, 1990). "Christmas Music: No Other Holiday Inspires a Broader Range of Melodies". Deseret News. p. W1.
^Nutt, Bill (7 Dec 2012). "Sister act". Entertainment. Asbury Park Press.
^Johnson, Robert (December 13, 1991). "Holiday albums run the gamut from blues to folk". San Antonio Express-News. p. 16C.
^Mason, Rick (December 14, 1990). "The Roches We Three Kings". Weekender. Lexington Herald-Leader. Herald-Leader wire services. p. 4.