

Originally released in 2015 as an exclusive Amazon Original, Christmas in Tahoe has been rereleased with five all-new, never-before-heard covers including “Merry Christmas Baby,” “The Cherry Tree Carol,” “Please Come Home for Christmas,” “Run Run Rudolph” and “Blue Christmas.” Christmas in Tahoe is available now to stream or download across all digital service providers including an Amazon Original Deluxe Edition featuring 20 songs at: /ChristmasInTahoe. GRAMMY-award winning, multiplatinum-selling band TRAIN reign in the start of the holiday season with a special rerelease of their first-ever holiday album Christmas in Tahoe, available everywhere today.

“…AN UPBEAT CELEBRATION OF SPENDING TIME WITH FRIENDS AND FAMILY.” “…A DISC THAT UNIQUELY STANDS OUT FROM THE USUAL FARE…” “… HIGHLY EVOCATIVE FROM BEGINNING TO END, AND IT WORKS WELL AS AN HOMAGE TO THE ORIGINALS.” “…INSPIRED…ONE OF THE BAND’S STRONGEST ADDITIONS TO ITS CATALOG…” SPECIAL HOLIDAY CAMPAIGN TO BENEFIT SAN FRANCISCO NON-PROFIT, FAMILY HOUSE “MERRY CHRISTMAS BABY,” “RUN RUN RUDOLPH,” “BLUE CHRISTMAS” AND MOREĬHRISTMAS IN TAHOE IS AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE AT PEET’S COFFEEBARS ACROSS THE COUNTRY “MERRY CHRISTMAS EVERYBODY,” PLUS NEVER-BEFORE-HEARD RENDITIONS OF LATEST COLLECTION INCLUDES HOLIDAY ORIGINALS LIKE #1 HIT “SHAKE UP CHRISTMAS” AND But even if Halo dips unapologetically into weirder and more challenging zones than she has before, Dust is also, on some level, a genuinely fun album-one that bears the stamp of its creator’s limitless curiosity.GRAMMY-AWARD WINNING BAND TRAIN RERELEASE HOLIDAY ALBUM WITH 5 ALL-NEW COVERS OF HOLIDAY CLASSICS Her vocals and lyrics are, just like the instrumentals into which they’re woven, another site of play: The voicings of Halo and her collaborators-notably Klein and Lafawndah on the standout single “Jelly”-recall as much the experiments of Meredith Monk as they do a more tightly laced pop single. Meanwhile, her stylized lyrics lean into nouveau-Beatnik territory as she asks questions like, “Did this ever happen/Do you ever happen?” over stretched-out dub. The producer’s music has always been exploratory, knitting together synth-pop, Detroit techno, and jazz with a singular, continuous voice, and that process feels particularly gleeful here. Dust is Laurel Halo’s loosest offering yet, orbiting out from its oddball-pop epicenters to the point of near-chaos.
