Christian artist Michael W. Smith enlisted some of Nashvilleâs best voices to join him on his fourth career holiday album, titled The Spirit of Christmas (Sparrow Records/Universal). Vince Gill (performing âChristmas Time Is Hereâ), Martina McBride (âWhat Child Is Thisâ), Jennifer Nettles (âChristmas Dayâ), Lady Antebellum (âWhite Christmasâ), and U2âs Bono are among the names lending their time and talents to the project. âIâm still pinching myself that we pulled all that off,â Smith said during rehearsals for CMA Country Christmas, which airs tonight at 7 p.m. CT on ABC.
Smith contributed two performances to tonightâs CMA Country Christmas airing, showcasing songs from the project. Carrie Underwood joined Smith for a rendition of âAll Is Well,â while Little Big Town offered their signature harmonies on âSilent Night.â
Robert Deaton, a longtime executive producer for the Country Music Association awards, as well as executive producer for CMA Country Christmas, signed on to produce the album, along with Smith orchestral maestro David Hamilton. The Spirit of Christmas marks Deatonâs first foray into album production, and Smith says the idea for the project originated with Deaton.
âLast yearâs [CMA Country Christmas] performance with Jennifer Nettles is what kicked off the whole idea to do this record,â Smith says. âI wanted to do another Christmas album, and collaborate with singers, so Robert brought this whole idea to me. Itâs a lot of his relationships. Robert began naming all these people, and I thought, âWhat if they all say no?â But then to get in there and find out that Little Big Town had my Go West Young Man record when they were teenagers. Thatâs wild. They were fans, and I think Carrie grew up singing some of my stuff in church.â
Smith assures the admiration is mutual. âIâm fans of everyone on this record, and I think itâs out of the box, and I like doing things out of the box. What a great opportunity to get outside of your musical bubble.â
In a time where collaborations are often solitary affairs, with artists laying down their separate vocal parts in studios thousands of miles apart, The Spirit of Christmas was crafted with artists melding their music talents together in the studio, lending a creative synergy to the recordings. âThe biggest challenge to making the record was schedules, with all these A-level artists,â Smith states. âI think just looking at the calendar and booking artists two and a half months out, that was the biggest challenge. But recording together created such a good fellowship. Iâve never really hung out with Lady A. I see Hillary [Scott] at Whole Foods and weâll chat. I sang with Little Big Town, Martina, Carrie, and I think they genuinely came in with a lot of excitement and passion.â

Carrie Underwood and Michael W. Smith perform “All Is Well” on “CMA Country Christmas,” airing tonight.
The Spirit of Christmas is a deft mix of hymns and classic carols, each uniquely suited to the artist performing it. For example, it was Little Big Town who crafted the harmonies heard on âSilent Night.â âThey came in extremely prepared and had worked on it. I thought, from a production perspective, I just wanted them to do their thing because they do it so well,â Smith said. âWe knew we wanted to do a lot of standards and take people down memory lane.â
One of the many standout tracks is âThe Darkest Midnight,â featuring a spoken word rendition by U2 lead singer Bono, whom Smith has been friends with for 12 years. âThat was one I didnât know we would pull off,â Smith says of the track. “I was almost afraid to ask him. I knew he was in the middle of finishing up the U2 record, which was five years in the making. We knew that getting him to sing a song was probably a long shot, and when Robert laid it out, he said, âWhat if Bono did a spoken word? What if he read a psalm or if he found an old Irish carol or something?â I emailed Bono, and he said the project sounded interesting.â
Smith selected the first and last verses from the seven-verse carol âThe Darkest Midnight,â and sent it to Bono to record. âI was a little taken aback by the whispering thing, because I had written this bed of music to go under it. When he first sent it, I thought, âIs this going to work? Heâs whispering.â I kept listening to it, and I thought, âThis is so Bono.â I think itâs brilliant, what he did.â

Michael W. Smith with Jennifer Nettles and Little Big Town
Smith is currently bringing the sounds of Christmas to audiences across the country as part of his
The Spirit of Christmas Tour. With another tour in the works for next year, Smith says heâs just beginning to look ahead to his next recording project. âI have to have time to dream a little bit,â says Smith. âI want to get out of the box and work with people Iâve never worked with. I love it when genres collide. I just watched the HBO documentary [
Sonic Highways] with Dave Grohl. Itâs amazing. Maybe he would come and do something on my record. I think there is room to bring in someone like Alison Krauss. Iâm a huge fan of hers; sheâs an amazing vocalist. For the next project, Iâm really giving myself room to dream.â
Watch: Michael W. Smith performs âAll Is Wellâ with Carrie Underwood and âSilent Nightâ with Little Big Town tonight (Dec. 1) during
CMA Country Christmas, which airs beginning at 7 p.m. CT on ABC.