Skip to main content

The Song I Keep Coming Back To: David Mead – The Smile of Rachael Ray (Album: Dudes, 2011)

Some songs tell a story. A rare few tell it the way a great short story does — through small, precise details that quietly break your heart. "The Smile of Rachael Ray" by David Mead is one of the rare few.

The song follows a man stranded at an airport on Christmas Eve, watching Rachael Ray's face smile from a magazine cover — the embodiment of a life of domestic bliss that feels impossibly out of reach. It's a Christmas song unlike any other. Not celebratory, not nostalgic in a cozy way — but searingly honest about what the season feels like when things are falling apart.

One critic (Ordinary Times) compared it to a short story by Raymond Carver — not because Mead was borrowing, but because he was channeling the same instinct: telling a largely unspoken narrative through striking, carefully chosen details of everyday life. That's an extraordinary compliment. And it's earned.

NPR called it "the weariest holiday song this side of 'I'll Be Home for Christmas'" and praised Mead's remarkable knack for capturing places in song — using each location as a metaphor for where we get stuck when we most wish we were home.

The song appears on Dudes, Mead's 2011 album — funded via Kickstarter by his fans (yes, also me), recorded in just nine days in New York City, and produced by Ethan Eubanks and Mead himself, with Adam Schlesinger serving as executive producer. The concept of the album is simple and brilliant: every song written from the perspective of a man. The result is one of Mead's most focused and emotionally direct records.

Mead's voice — described by Uncut as "a soaring but unshowy falsetto" and by Entertainment Weekly as "honeyed and compelling" — is perfectly suited to a song like this. There is no showboating. Just a voice carrying the weight of a story that could be anyone's.

NPR described "The Smile of Rachael Ray" as a wistful, heartbreaking and humane new Christmas classic back in December 2011. Over a decade later, that verdict still stands. In fact, it feels even more true.

David Mead deserves a much bigger audience than he has. This song is one of the many reasons why.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Jason Falkner - Biography & Discography

There is this kind of musician who is writing, releasing records and performing his own music for more than two decades - but misses the aim that is chart success? The one who creates stunning music and don't get any recognition by public, but by his loyal fans? One of them is Jason Falkner . To sum it up: he may be one of the most underrated musicians of the last two decades. What a pity! Falkner started his musical career with a band called The Three O'Clock but soon he joined a new band of his former bandmate (Roger Joseph Manning Jr.) - Jellyfish . After the success of the first record ( Bellybutton ) he left the band and said he'll be never again a band member again (where he was clearly wrong). His solo career started in 1996 with Presents Author Unknown , followed with the fabulous Can You Still Feel? . I recommend to listen to Can You Still Feel? from start to finish - there's no filler song, no low point. 2001 was a good year for loyal fan...

Ivy - Say You Will (from the new record "Traces Of You")

 

Rooney - Kids After Sunset (The Lost Album): Interview with Taylor Locke & Ned Brower (Bandmates from Rooney)

Bandmates Taylor Locke and Ned Brower took the time to talk about a special chapter in the history of Rooney : the "lost" second album, Kids After Sunset ! I reached out to both of them separately and asked if they could answer a few questions - check it out below. Over the past 20 years, aplenty songs from this album surfaced online and were shared through blogs, fans, and social media. These were mostly demos or low-quality recordings, but in 2024, a seemingly final version of the album appeared on the internet! Kids After Sunset - cover art concept PPS:   Around 2004, Rooney recorded a significant number of songs for their intended second album,  Kids After Sunset - at least twenty-five tracks, as far as I know. The plan was for most of these songs to be included on the album. However, it is said that the record label rejected nearly all of them, claiming they didn’t like any of the tracks, and instructed the band to start from scratch with a completely new album. I...