A Heavy Mental Christmas

A Heavy Mental Christmas is a CD released by heavy metal band Helix in 2008. It is Helix' 11th full-length studio album and 20th album released overall. It is a Christmas album featuring both standards and original music. It was released in Walmart stores in Canada in October 2008 through Universal Music and GBS Records.[1]

A Heavy Mental Christmas
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 21, 2008
GenreHeavy metal
Length25:29
LabelGBS, Universal
ProducerGord Prior
Helix chronology
The Power of Rock and Roll
(2007)
A Heavy Mental Christmas
(2008)
Vagabond Bones
(2009)

Track listing

  1. "Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer"
  2. "Rockin' Around the Christmas Tree"
  3. "Santa Claus Is Back in Town"
  4. A Wonderful Christmas Time
  5. "Jingle Bell Rock"
  6. "Happy Xmas (War Is Over)"
  7. "Sock It to Me Santa"
  8. "Jingle Bells"
  9. "Silent Night"
  10. "Christmas Time Is Here Again" *
  • Original song written by Steve Georgakopoulos, Gord Prior, and Brian Vollmer

Credits

Produced and arranged by Gord Prior
Co-produced by Brian Vollmer, Steve Georgakopoulos and Aaron Murray
Recorded and mixed by Aaron Murray

Recorded and mixed between August 7 and 27, 2008 at The A Room in London, Ontario.
Mastered at Sterling Sound, New York.

Helix members

Brian Vollmer – lead vocals
Rick VanDyk – lead guitar
Jim Lawson – lead guitar
Brent "Ned" Niemi – drums
Paul Fonseca – bass guitar

This was the current Helix lineup listed and pictured on the CD packaging, but not the musicians who were credited with recording the CD.

Musicians

Brian Vollmer – lead vocals
Steve Georgakopoulos – all rhythm guitars, lead guitar
Gord Prior – back up vocals, arrangements, tambourines and jingle bells
Brent "Ned" Neimi – drums and backup vocals
Paul Fonseca – bass and backup vocals
Rick VanDyk – lead guitar and backup vocals
Aaron Murray – keyboards on "Sock It To Me Santa"
Doug Weir – backup vocals[2]

gollark: Don't they mostly have onboard power metering anyway?
gollark: Oh, the US runs on 120V, right.
gollark: I see.
gollark: Theoretically I can measure the power draw of a lot of bits of my laptop, but this is not very useful unless trying to optimize battery life or something.
gollark: What do you actually need that for?

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.