Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"The Christmas Song" Angel: 1977 A version of the rock band's own 1977 hit "The Winter Song", but featuring alternate lyrics (both tracks featured The California Boys Choir and both were produced by Eddie Leonetti). "The Christmas Song (Merry Christmas to You)" The King Cole Trio: 1946 Written in 1944 by Mel Tormé and Robert Wells. Sometimes ...
"An Old-Fashioned Christmas" Gene Autry: Columbia: Gold [15] 1946 "Christmas Island"/ "Winter Wonderland" Andrews Sisters and Guy Lombardo and His Royal Canadians Decca: Gold [19] 1946 "The Christmas Song (Merry Christmas to You)"/ "In the Cool of Evening" The King Cole Trio: Capitol: Gold [20] 1944 "White Christmas"/ "If You Are But a Dream ...
Christmas Holiday charts. Billboard magazine's first annual "Christmas Records" charts from November 30, 1963. Billboard magazine only charted Christmas singles and albums along with the other popular non-holiday records until the 1958 holiday season when they published their first section that surveys only Christmas music.
It took ABBA almost 50 years to release their first Christmas song but it was worth the wait! Oh, and their digital hologängers make it all the more special. "Christmas Vacation" by Mavis Staples
The Pogues, "Fairytale of New York". If you're a little too happy on Christmas, tune in to this depressing but beautiful staple and take it down a notch. 12. Bruce Springsteen, "Santa Claus Is ...
Here are some fresh newer Christmas songs to recharge your Christmas music playlist. For this list, we considered songs released in the last few years as "new." JIMMY FALLON & MEGHAN TRAINOR
The newest song in the top 30 most performed Christmas songs – "All I Want for Christmas is You", co-written and performed by Mariah Carey in 1994 – entered the list for the first time in 2015; the song hit the Billboard Hot 100 top 10 for the first time in 2017, [47] and was named "the UK's favourite Christmas song" the same year by The ...
"A Holly Jolly Christmas", also known as "Have a Holly Jolly Christmas", is a Christmas song written by Johnny Marks and most famously performed by Burl Ives. The song has since become one of the top 25 most-performed "holiday" songs written by ASCAP members, for the first five years of the 21st century. [ 1 ]