Arts a Entertainment Taking Credit Thank Jewish writers, composers and peOrmers for many Christmas traditions. VIVI ABRAMS Special to the Jewish News A Methodist dad wants to get into the Christmas mood. He plays a record of "The Christmas Song," and sings along to the familiar "chestnuts roasting on an open fire" refrain. Then he feels like a movie, and watches White Christmas with his family. Before bed, he reads his daughter the Caldecott-winning children's Christmas book The Polar Express. He's just had a very Jewish night. Not many people know it, but Jews have a long history of orchestrating Christmas, back to the early 1800s when French composer Adolphe Adam wrote the music for "0 Holy Night." "Christmas Song" composer Mel Torme also was Jewish. Chris Van Allsburg, a convert ro Judaism, wrote The Polar Express. And White Christmas, a Bing Crosby film about song-and-dance men who romance women for the holidays in a Vermont ski lodge, had a Jewish star (Danny Kaye), director (Michael Curtiz) and composer (Irving Berlin). Berlin, born Israel Baline, wrote the song "White Christmas" for Holiday Inn, another Crosby film, in 1942, and resurrected it for White Christmas in 1954. Actor and commentator Ben Stein recently wrote an essay saying that Jews should feel no shame about having so much power in Hollywood because it's a sign of how much they love America. He told the Jewish News the same about Christmas. "I have always felt that no one loved Christmas like the Jews," Stein wrote in an e-mail. "No family ten- sions, no disappointments about the wrong gift, just that great Christmas spirit. For a Jew to be in America at Christmas, with all the love in the air, after two mil- lennia of being hunted and killed at Christian holi- days, is pure bliss, and I believe we feel it keenly." Nate Teibloom, editor ofjewhoo.com , a Web site that identifies famous Jews, had a different reason for why Jews involve themselves in the Christmas spirit: the bottom line. "There's a huge market," he said. "Virtually every recording artist puts our a Christmas album eventu- ally; including Jewish recording artists. It's money in the bank. [However], some Jewish recording artists tend to shy away from doing the religious Christmas songs." One Jewish popular songwriter, who asked not to identified, believes so many Jewish composers write Christmas Not only did Irving Berlin, center, write the ever-popular "White Christmas," he also wrote the score for the film "Easter Parade," starring Fred Astaire, left, and Peter Lawford, right. Vivi Abrams is a staff writer for our sister paper; the Atlanta Jewish Times. Secular Sounds Had your fill of Christmas music? Check out this sampling of new CDs from Jewish performers. GAIL ZIMMERMAN Arts & Entertainment Editor IV hile Christmas albums from Jewish performers are a staple this time of year — witness Barbra Streisand's Christmas Memories, a new CD of holiday music featuring a beauti- ful version of Schubert's "Ave Maria" — there is plenty to whet the appetites of those yearning for some secular tunes. Here is a handful of some of the best new releases in recent weeks: For The Rock Fan The Essential Neil Diamond a com- prehensive two-CD collection of his career to date, spans 1966 to 2001, with 38 tracks from Diamond's Bang Records, Uni, Capitol and Columbia Records output. Highlights include the original mono "Solitary Man" and "Cherry, Cherry," "Song Sung Blue," 12/21 2001 58 "Cracklin Rosie," "You Don't Bring Me Flowers" and "September Morn." The song "You Are the Best Parr of Me" hails from his last album, Three Chord Opera. A trilo- gy of hits from The Jazz Singer— "America," "Hello Again" and `Love on the Rocks" — also is featured. This col- lection boasts nearly two dozen songs that hit the Top 20 during the last 35 years, and 10 live concert tracks, six of them previously unreleased. 4V:91 MANN For The Folk Fan Simon & Garfunkel' The Columbia Studio Recordings 1964-1970 is a boxed set containing five digitally remastered classic albums by the first 1960s duo to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The packaging incorporates cardboard sleeves replicat- ing the original LP releases of Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M.; Sounds of Silence, Parsley Sage, Rosemary and Thyme, Bookends, and Bridge Over Troubled Water. Also included in this specially constructed long-box format are a booklet with rare photos, original liner notes and newly commis- SyVt9N & GARF LINKE. sioned liner notes. Fans also are treated to 13 rare and previous- ly unreleased bonus tracks, including demo versions of "A Poem on the Underground Wall," "Old Friends" and "Bridge Over Troubled Water." For The Big Band Jazz Fan Artie Shaw: Self:Portrait is a five- CD set of remastered tracks five and six decades old but still fresh and vivid. Shaw, 91, one of the best clar- inetists of the 20th century and a peerless band leader and jazz innovato• who led various ensembles from 1936- 1954, chose the music for what is the most complete collection assembled of his vast output. Incorporating classical interpretation into his arrangements, Shaw brought swing jazz into new ter- ritory. He includes his favorites in this collection, such as his famed versions of 'Star Dust," "Begin the Beguine" and "Streamline." Live performances of "At Sundown," "Sweet Sue" and "Diga Diga Doo" feature drummer Buddy Rich. For The Standards Fan Jeff Harmer: Sammy Cahn All the Way features the award-winning