
17 Songs, 1 Hour, 16 Minutes

The Christmas Attic
Trans-Siberian Orchestra
TITLE | TIME | ||
---|---|---|---|
The Ghosts of Christmas Eve
|
2:14 | ||
Boughs of Holly
|
4:25 | ||
The World That She Sees
|
5:59 | ||
The World That He Sees
|
4:42 | ||
Midnight Christmas Eve
|
4:21 | ||
The March of the Kings/Hark the Herald Angel
|
3:54 | ||
The Three Kings and I (What Really Happened)
|
6:29 | ||
Christmas Canon
|
4:17 | ||
Joy of Man's Desire/Angels We Have Heard On High
|
3:54 | ||
Find Our Way Home
|
3:46 | ||
Appalachian Snowfall
|
4:12 | ||
The Music Box
|
3:01 | ||
The Snow Came Down
|
5:43 | ||
Christmas In the Air
|
4:12 | ||
Dream Child (A Christmas Dream)
|
7:04 | ||
An Angel's Share
|
3:06 | ||
Music Box Blues
|
5:36 |
About Trans-Siberian Orchestra
Long renowned for selling more concert tickets than albums, Trans-Siberian Orchestra united a 60-piece orchestra plus chorus with the talents of Paul O'Neill, a veteran hard rock producer. The group released its debut album, Christmas Eve and Other Stories, just in time for the 1996 holiday season; it eventually sold three-times platinum in the United States. The Christmas Attic followed in 1998, and two years later the group issued its first non-seasonal recording, Beethoven's Last Night. The live DVD and perennial PBS donation incentive The Ghosts of Christmas Eve arrived in 2001.
In 2004, the group returned with its fourth album, The Lost Christmas Eve, which produced its best sales in the U.S. since the debut. Trans-Siberian Orchestra then collected all its Christmas recordings on the three-CD/one-DVD collection Christmas Trilogy. In 2009, after a five-year hiatus, the group returned with the two-disc Night Castle, a non-holiday-related concept album. A five-song EP, Dreams of Fireflies (On a Christmas Night), followed in 2012. Letters from the Labyrinth, their first full-length in five years and a rare non-concept album, appeared in 2015, and in late 2016 the band brought back and updated the Ghosts of Christmas Eve live show for a North American tour, and the original recording saw a first-time audio release. On April 5, 2017, Trans-Siberian Orchestra reported that founder O'Neill had died following a chronic illness. ~ John Bush
In 2004, the group returned with its fourth album, The Lost Christmas Eve, which produced its best sales in the U.S. since the debut. Trans-Siberian Orchestra then collected all its Christmas recordings on the three-CD/one-DVD collection Christmas Trilogy. In 2009, after a five-year hiatus, the group returned with the two-disc Night Castle, a non-holiday-related concept album. A five-song EP, Dreams of Fireflies (On a Christmas Night), followed in 2012. Letters from the Labyrinth, their first full-length in five years and a rare non-concept album, appeared in 2015, and in late 2016 the band brought back and updated the Ghosts of Christmas Eve live show for a North American tour, and the original recording saw a first-time audio release. On April 5, 2017, Trans-Siberian Orchestra reported that founder O'Neill had died following a chronic illness. ~ John Bush
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- ORIGIN
- New York, NY
-
- GENRE
-
Holiday
-
- FORMED
- 1995
Songs
-
Christmas / Sarajevo 12/24 (Instrumental)
Christmas Eve and Other Stories
-
Christmas Canon
The Christmas Attic
-
Wizards In Winter (Instrumental)
The Lost Christmas Eve
-
A Mad Russian's Christmas (Instrumental)
Christmas Eve and Other Stories
-
Christmas Canon Rock
The Lost Christmas Eve
-
O Come All Ye Faithful / O Holy Night (Instrumental)
Christmas Eve and Other Stories
-
Siberian Sleigh Ride (Instrumental)
The Lost Christmas Eve
-
Requiem (The Fifth)
Beethoven's Last Night
-
Beethoven
Beethoven's Last Night