Prior to this his most notable outing was onstage in the TNT production "Christmas in Washington 2008", in which he sang "O Holy Night".
Dominici's voice was also heard on the YtseJam Records release "When Dream And Day Unite Demos" which featured pre-production and vocal demos of several songs, as well as Dominici singing Beatles Covers and the traditional Christmas song O Holy Night.
Radio operators on ships in the Atlantic heard a broadcast that included Fessenden playing the song O Holy Night on the violin and reading a passage from the Bible.
On 24 December 1906, Reginald Fessenden, a Canadian inventor and radio pioneer, broadcast the first AM radio program, which started with a phonograph record of "Ombra mai fu" followed by him playing "O Holy Night" on the violin and singing the final verse.
Saturday Night Live | Holy See | Holy Roman Empire | A Midsummer Night's Dream | Holy Roman Emperor | Twelfth Night | Late Night with Conan O'Brien | Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor | Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor | Late Night with David Letterman | Holy Week | Monday Night Football | Holy Land | Saturday Night Fever | Friday Night Lights | Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor | Holy Orders | Night Gallery | Holy Spirit | Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor | Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor | Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor | Three Dog Night | Silent Night | Holy Trinity | Friday Night Lights (TV series) | Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor | Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor | Monty Python and the Holy Grail | Holy Grail |
The band recorded covers of "Build Me Up Buttercup", "That's Entertainment", "Hark! The Herald Angels Sing", "O Holy Night", "Teenage Kicks", "Where is the Love?", "Fall at Your Feet" and "Runaway Train", as well as new tracks "Peaches", "Let it Go" and "Mummy Trade", all of which appeared as B-sides to "Air Hostess".
In early 2008, Bratland attanded the Bergen auditions for Norske Talenter where he, sporting a black Marilyn Manson T-shirt, performed "O Holy Night".
According to Placide, he wrote the poem "Minuit Chrétien" (O Holy Night) in a stagecoach to Paris, between Mâcon and Dijon.