Snaildartha:_The_Story_of_Jerry_the_Christmas_Snail

<i>Snaildartha: The Story of Jerry the Christmas Snail</i>

Snaildartha: The Story of Jerry the Christmas Snail

Jazz and spoken-word holiday album by Snaildartha 6


Snaildartha: The Story of Jerry the Christmas Snail - A Soul Jazz Extravaganza is a 2004 jazz and spoken-word holiday album. It was composed and produced by Chris Strouth, and performed by the Snaildartha 6 combo, which includes saxophonist George Cartwright of the jazz group Curlew and storyteller and comic Matt Fugate, who wrote the text with Strouth. The album retells the story of Buddha through a small snail, Jerry the Christmas Snail, who achieves enlightenment after meeting and having adventures with other Christmas-themed animals on a pilgrimage to the North Pole, eventually meeting and bonding with Santa Claus.[1] The title is a pun on the Buddha's birth name, Siddhartha.[4]

Quick Facts Snaildartha: The Story of Jerry the Christmas Snail - A Soul Jazz Extravaganza, Studio album by The Snaildartha 6 ...
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Snaildartha was created in 1993 for a performance-art series at Red Eye Theater in Minneapolis. 10 years later, Strouth and Fugate recorded a revised version with saxophonist Cartwright. First issued privately as a Christmas gift, the album was later given a wider release by Innova Recordings. A remastered digital edition of Snaildartha was released by Stand Up! Records on November 13, 2020.[5]

The album has developed a cult following thanks to its regular inclusion in DJ Jon Solomon's daylong marathon of Christmas music on Princeton, New Jersey radio station WPRB-FM,[6] as well as an annual Christmas broadcast on KFAI in Minneapolis.[5] Solomon has played the album in its entirety annually since 2004. It is routinely the highest-streamed portion of the broadcast, and has inspired some listeners to hang snail ornaments from their Christmas trees in tribute.[7][8]

Critical reception

In 2022, Vulture writer Maura Johnston named Snaildartha one of the 50 best Christmas albums of the last 30 years, calling it "an ideal lazy Christmas Day soundtrack" that "gets even better with repeated listenings."[9]

MinnPost arts critic Pamela Espeland called Snaildartha a "weird but endearing" Christmas tradition, comparing it to the Arlo Guthrie song "Alice's Restaurant" and its ties to Thanksgiving.[10] Avant Music News called it a "future holiday classic" and "a twisted take on the holiday season."[11] Jason Victor Serinus, writing in Secrets of Home Theater and High Fidelity, was more ambivalent, but called the story "charming", especially Fugate's "deadpan delivery".[3]

Track listing

All songs composed by Chris Strouth and performed by Snaildartha featuring Matt Fugate. Text written by Matt Fugate and Chris Strouth.

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Credits

  • As told by: Matt Fugate
  • Sax: George Cartwright
  • Drums: Terry Haanen
  • Organ: Scott LeGere
  • Mixed by: Brian Jacoby
  • Mastered by: Bob DeMaa
  • Produced and directed by: Chris Strouth

References

  1. "The Snaildartha 6: Snaildartha". Innova Recordings. Archived from the original on February 3, 2019. Retrieved August 31, 2014.
  2. Serinus, Jason Victor (December 2005). "Holiday Music Reviews". Secrets of Home Theater and High Fidelity. No. 55. Retrieved November 9, 2020.
  3. "My Favorites: Jon Solomon's Holiday Tunes". Northwestern Magazine. Fall 2019. Retrieved November 9, 2020.
  4. Mason Butler (November 12, 2020). "11/12/2020 A.M. Drive". KFAI (Podcast). Retrieved November 12, 2020.
  5. Waits, Jennifer (December 20, 2018). "WPRB DJ Jon Solomon Celebrates 30 Years of Christmas Marathons". Radio Survivor. Retrieved November 9, 2020.
  6. Solomon, Jon (December 13, 2018). "How did the story of a snail seeking enlightenment become a cherished Xmas tradition?". City Pages. Minneapolis-St. Paul. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  7. Edelstein, Jeff (December 3, 2018). "Jon Solomon's Christmas music marathon turns 30 this year, will go for 30 hours". The Trentonian. Trenton, New Jersey. Archived from the original on October 19, 2020. Retrieved October 18, 2020.
  8. Borella, Mike (November 15, 2004). "New on Innova". Avant Music News. Retrieved November 9, 2020.

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