Alison Sudol Releases New Soothing Holiday Song “Christmas Will Be Waiting”

Photo Credit: Raymond Flotat

Alison Sudol released a Christmas song earlier this month. “Christmas Will Be Waiting” is smooth and as uplifting as it is sobering. The song was released with cover artwork depicting a mother holding a daughter who is face-painted, not-too over extravagantly in clown makeup.

If the child’s makeup gives any impression of a silly song, it is not doing its job. Sudol’s lyrics and progressions reach toward territory of lullabies and ballads. A mother reassures her child, Christmas will be waiting. In three parts, the music picks up more instruments as it sails on open seas through its three minute window. By the end, drums accent each beat and bells recede into the music just as quickly as they return. The song trails off into a peaceful trance; perhaps the child fell asleep.

Sudol is most widely known for her appearance in Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them, a movie set in the world of Harry Potter, as Queenie Goldstein. Her career as a musician has more scope than her output in acting but has awarded her less fame. The new song, released at a time of December when children crumble under the pressure of Christmas being so close yet so far away, graces her fans with a truly excellent display of her voice and musical sensibility. Watch it below.

Photography Credit: Raymond Flotat

Conrad Brittenham: My name is Conrad. I am one year out of college and pursuing a career in writing and journalism. I studied literature at Bard College, in the Hudson Valley. My thesis focuses on the literal and figurative uses of disease in Herman Melville’s most famous works, including Moby-Dick, Benito Cereno, and Billy Budd. My literary research on the topic of disease carried over to more historical findings about how humans tend to deal with and think about the problem of virus and infectivity. I’ve worked at a newspaper and an ad agency, as well as for the past year at an after school program, called The Brooklyn Robot Foundry. All of these positions have influenced the way I approach my work, my writing, and the way I interact with others in a professional setting. I’ve lived in London and New York, and have always had a unique perspective on international cultural matters. I am an avid drawer and a guitarist, but I would like to eventually work for a major news publication as an investigative journalist.
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