ALL I WANT FOR CHRISTMAS 2023… IS A NEW (Older) XMAS SONG AT NO. 1!

Happy Holidays everyone!  I hope you are all doing well and staying safe out there!  So, it’s been awhile.  How long, you ask?  Well, since July 2022, when I was bursting with excitement over the newfound success of Kate Bush’s “Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God).”  Before that, just two blog posts in 2021.  

Before I continue with this (return) blog post, I want to thank everyone who’s been reading my blog (which started in early 2016) and continue to enjoy it and comment about it, and continue to subscribe to it!  I’m forever grateful. 

With Thanksgiving in the rear view mirror, Christmas 2023 is already here…at least in the form of holiday music.  

For decades, pop singles charts in other parts of the world have celebrated the holiday season with an annual offering of old and new Xmas classics.  And, in Britain, at least, they’ve always made a big deal out of what would be the coveted “Christmas No. 1!”

Over here in the U.S., from at least the late 70s until a few years ago, it was very hard for a Christmas song to even chart on the BILLBOARD Hot 100.  The Eagles’ “Please Come Home For Christmas” reached No. 18, and the 1984 charity single “Do They Know It’s Christmas?” by Band Aid (the biggest-selling U.K. single during the entire 1980s, and still the second-biggest of all time in the U.K.) made a big debut inside the Top 40, but by then, it was already January, and the highest it could go was No. 13, despite selling 2.5 million copies here in America and going Gold, because, at that point, no radio stations were playing it. 

Well, thanks in large part to streaming services and digital song sales, a few years ago, BILLBOARD updated its Hot 100 rules to include Christmas songs every year, if they got enough sales, airplay and streaming to warrant an appearance.  It’s been interesting.  

You have holiday classics more than or close to 60 years old by Burl Ives (“A Holly Jolly Christmas” from 1964), Brenda Lee (“Rockin’ Around The Christmas Tree” from 1958) and Bobby Helms (“Jingle Bell Rock” from 1957) hanging around the Top 5 every Xmas since the Hot 100 update, and it’s cool.  

Even Wham!’s “Last Christmas” (which was never officially released as a single here in America) has found its way to the upper echelon of the BILLBOARD Hot 100, and with every year, climbs higher and higher, and in the last chart week of 2022, has since given Wham! their first Top 5 hit since “I’m Your Man” reached No. 3 in February 1986. 

And, leading the way during the holiday season every year since the update, Mariah Carey’s HUGELY POPULAR “All I Want For Christmas Is You,” from her 1994 multi-platinum holiday album, MERRY CHRISTMAS (which has sold 15 million copies worldwide).  “All I Want For Christmas Is You” was not allowed to chart in 1994, per BILLBOARD Hot 100 rules at the time, since it wasn’t officially released as a physical single.  

Now, I will easily admit that, while Mariah certainly has talent and then some, I have never really been a fan of Mariah Carey, and certainly not a fan of “All I Want For Christmas Is You.”  But, when BILLBOARD updated its Hot 100 rule to include holiday music, as a singles chart nerd, when “All I Want For Christmas Is You” went to No. 1 in 2019 (after waiting 25 years), the various records (no pun intended) it set were impressive.  

To briefly borrow from Joni Mitchell’s “River” (from 1971), we’re coming on Christmas 2023, after ruling the BILLBOARD Hot 100 for 12 non-consecutive weeks spanning four holiday seasons, can we PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE let another song, a new (older) song be the Christmas No. 1 here in America? 

With that said, and kind of inspired by Kate Bush’s monumental, unparalleled and triumphant return to the Hot 100 over the summer of 2022 with her brilliant 1985 classic, the aforementioned “Running Up That Hill (A Deal With God),” what if we delved deep into the 80s for other Xmas classics to be the new (older) Christmas No. 1!

Thanks to its Season 4 inclusion in STRANGER THINGS, “Running Up That Hill” (the BILLBOARD No. 5 Song of Summer in 2022; No. 23 for all of 2022!) surprised everyone (yours truly included) by reaching No. 3 on the Hot 100, spending 15 consecutive weeks in the Top 10, and 20 new weeks on the Hot 100 (for a total of 40 weeks, when adding the 20 weeks it spent on the Hot 100 in 1985).

We could take a page from Kate Bush’s amazing chart run in the Summer of 2022 and do the same with a holiday gem from the 80s and beyond!  I know these are all long shots (…or are they?…), but it’s fun to think about.  So, let’s go!

KATE BUSH — DECEMBER WILL BE MAGIC AGAIN (1979).

Kate Bush performed a song on her 1979 Christmas holiday special called “December Will Be Magic Again.”  That version was never released as a single.  Another version a year later WAS released, and reached the U.K. Top 30.  But, it’s the original 1979 version I would love to see released and maybe even do well, especially after the comeback Kate had in 2022.

JOHN & YOKO AND THE PLASTIC ONO BAND — HAPPY XMAS (WAR IS OVER) (1971).

It’s hard to believe it’s been nearly 43 years since the tragic death of John Lennon.  But, John’s music has endured, and, surprisingly, the 1971 song never reached the Top 40 on the BILLBOARD Hot 100, until 2022, where it reached No. 38 on the Hot 100.

Following John’s death in 1980, several of his songs re-charted in the U.K. and other parts of the globe.  “Happy Xmas (War Is Over)” reached a new U.K. peak in 1981 at No. 2 — right behind “Imagine” at No. 1.  I could totally see “Happy Xmas (War Is Over)” re-enter the upper reaches of the Hot 100 every holiday season!

THE WAITRESSES — CHRISTMAS WRAPPING (1981).

“Christmas Wrapping” by The Waitresses (from the 1981 EP, I COULD RULE THE WORLD IF I COULD ONLY GET THE PARTS) is a song that started many of the holiday shows Maryhope and I did on STUCK IN THE 80s.  Honestly, it’s so much fun, I don’t know why it’s not on the Hot 100 every Christmas already!

THE RAMONES — MERRY CHRISTMAS (I DON’T WANT TO FIGHT TONIGHT) (UK REMIX; 1987).

The Ramones have actually hit the BILLBOARD Hot 100 three times, and all from the 1977 album, ROCKET TO RUSSIA: “Sheena Is A Punk Rocker” reached No. 81, “Rockaway Beach” (their highest-charting single) went to No. 66, and their cover of the 1958 Bobby Freeman classic, “Do You Wanna Dance?” stopped at No. 86.  

In 1987, they released the song, “Merry Christmas (I Don’t Want To Fight Tonight),” and a U.K. remix of which became a holiday staple on STUCK IN THE 80s for a long time.  Wouldn’t you like to see The Ramones back on the chart and in the Top 40 for the first time?  Or the Top 10?  Or even No. 1?  I know I would!

CHRIS REA — DRIVING HOME FOR CHRISTMAS (1986).

Englishman Chris Rea has had so much success in his U.K. homeland, but very little success here in America.  He reached No. 12 on the Hot 100 in 1978 with “Fool (If You Think It’s Over),” and despite having five other Hot 100 hits between 1978 and 1989, Chris Rea is criminally regarded as a one-hit wonder here in America.

First released in 1986, “Driving Home For Christmas” was widely available in 1988, found on the Chris Rea compilation, NEW LIGHT THROUGH OLD WINDOWS.  In 1988, “Driving Home For Christmas” stopped at No. 53 on the U.K. singles chart, and reached a new peak of No. 10 in 2021!, and over the years, has reached the Top 10 in at least 10 other countries.  It’s time for some American chart love during this holiday season!  

Up until a few years ago, I had actually forgotten about this holiday treasure, but since then, it’s been part of my holiday go-to playlist.  And, I love it more and more each year.  If you have never heard this gem before, in a word, I call it “lovely.”  You will too!  Check it out!

DAVID BOWIE & BING CROSBY — PEACE ON EARTH/LITTLE DRUMMER BOY (1977 / 1982).

When I saw this performed on BING CROSBY’S MERRIE OLDE CHRISTMAS on television during the 1977 holiday season, I thought it was so magical, and it will be a part of me for all time.

Since I wasn’t really following music back in 1977 (I know, hard to believe now), David Bowie was not on my radar (also very hard to believe).  But, for a long time now, “Peace On Earth/Little Drummer Boy” has been my favorite Xmas song ever.  There’s just something so special about it.

This song was one of the last songs Bing Crosby recorded before he passed away in October 1977 at the age of 74.  It reached No. 3 in the U.K. and Ireland, and No. 6 in Norway.  I will love this song for all time, and I’m kinda surprised it hasn’t reached the Hot 100 ever.  Maybe this year?

THE HIVES & CYNDI LAUPER — A CHRISTMAS DUEL (2008).

Cyndi Lauper has put out so many holiday songs over the years that are worthy of Hot 100 representation EVERY holiday season, like 1992’s “Santa Claus Is Comin’ To Town” with Frank Sinatra, 1993’s “Feels Like Christmas” and the always fun “Christmas Conga,” from Cyndi’s wonderful 1998 holiday album, MERRY CHRISTMAS…HAVE A NICE LIFE.  But, it’s Cyndi’s memorable 2008 duet with the Swedish band The Hives, “A Christmas Duel,” that has topped my Cyndi Xmas list for the past 15 years.

One of the many things I love about Cyndi Lauper is that she will perform with pretty much everyone, no-holds-barred.  And on “A Christmas Duel,” you have this amazing 60s Motown-type, girl-group sound replete with lyrics that are, well, I’ll just say, non-traditional.  It’s brilliant, it’s fun, it’s bold, it’s got swears and managed to reach No. 4 in The Hives’ homeland of Sweden.  Pretty fucking impressive.  And, yes, a big honkin’ longshot of making the Hot 100 here in America ever.  But it’s a nice thought.

THE POGUES featuring KIRSTY MacCOLL — FAIRYTALE OF NEW YORK (1987).

I had already started working on this blog post when today, Thursday, November 30, 2023, I learned of the very sad passing of The Pogues’ singer and principal songwriter, Shane MacGowan, who had passed away at the age of 65.  Of Shane MacGowan’s passing, Irish president Michael Higgins said:

“[Shane’s] words have connected Irish people all over the globe to their culture and history …  The genius of Shane’s contribution includes the fact that his songs capture within them, as Shane would put it, the measure of our dreams — of so many worlds, and particularly those of love, of the emigrant experience and of facing the challenges of that experience with authenticity and courage, and of living and seeing the sides of life that so many turn away from.”

If there is any one holiday song that I have come to love more and more every year, it’s this one.  “Fairytale Of New York” by The Pogues and the late, great Kirsty MacColl has become one of my all-time favorite holiday songs.

“Fairytale Of New York” originally reached No. 2 in 1987, and has returned to the Top 20 on the U.K. singles chart every year since 2005.  It is THE most-played Christmas song in the U.K. of the 21st century, and as of the week ending today, November 30, 2023, “Fairytale Of New York” has amassed a total of 113 non-consecutive weeks on the U.K. Top 75 singles chart, good for sixth-best of all time.  There are many in the U.K. and beyond that are calling for “Fairytale Of New York” to be this year’s Christmas No. 1 in the U.K., myself included.

Though the song has gone five-times Platinum in the U.K., “Fairytale Of New York” and its holiday message of nostalgia, alcoholism, addiction and lost love has never quite resonated here in America, which is disappointing and sad, though with Shane’s passing today, “Fairytale” is now No. 11 (as of this writing) and moving up on the iTunes chart here in America.  That makes me smile!

In the U.K., the most-popular Xmas song ever is “Fairytale Of New York,” while here in America it’s “All I Want For Christmas Is You.”  Let’s go to change that!

LAST CHRISTMAS — WHAM! (1984)

So, if “Fairytale Of New York” isn’t an option for a new (older) Christmas No. 1 in the U.S. of A., how about one of the songs that has the best chance of unseating Mariah Carey at the top this Xmas — “Last Christmas” by Wham!

Why would it be cool to have “Last Christmas” be the Christmas No. 1 here in America this year?  Well, besides replacing Mariah Carey at No. 1, “Last Christmas” is already No. 13 and moving up on the latest BILLBOARD Hot 100 (dated December 2, 2023).  “Last Christmas,” which has risen steadily in the past few years, reached a new peak in 2022 at No. 4.  

The late, great George Michael (who passed away on Christmas Day 2016) was just inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame Class of 2023.  I think that a 39-year-old holiday pop song reaching the top all these years later is a testament to George Michael’s work, with Wham! and solo.  

The day after Halloween 2023, Mariah Carey released a video basically saying it’s almost Christmas and time to play her song and make it No. 1 again.  Ugh.  How fucking annoying.  Some say it’s not Xmas until Mariah Carey says it is (and the day after Halloween no less)?!  I don’t think so.  But it’s another reason to hope that “Last Christmas” rules the top of the Hot 100 chart this Xmas.  AND, it’s an 80s Xmas song!  Of course I want it to be No. 1!  

So, let’s go to make it this year’s new (older) Christmas No. 1 song in America!  “Last Christmas,” the 2023 Christmas No. 1 in America, and “Fairytale Of New York” as the 2023 Christmas No. 1 in the U.K.!  And no Mariah Carey!!  That would be a Happy Christmas for this chart nerd indeed and beyond!

Thank you, so much, my partner, Maryhope, for inspiring me to write and get back to doing something I love, and for everything you do, and everything you are!

Maryhope and yours truly during our annual holiday and solstice show at WMPG-FM, Portland, Maine, December 17, 2017!

And thank you Shane, for your words and your music, Christmas will definitely be missing a light and then some this year…

A toast to you, Shane MacGowan, wherever you are…

xmas song of the day – “Peace On Earth / Little Drummer Boy” | DAVID BOWIE & BING CROSBY | 1977 / 1982.

Happy Holidays!  Since it’s the first year of my blog, and since it’s the last year for my Annual Holiday Show (TONIGHT!!; 12.25.2016) on my little 20-year-old 80s radio program, STUCK IN THE 80s (on WMPG community radio in Portland, Maine), I wanted to present to you THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS, or, 31 of my favorite 80s holiday musical treats.

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Thank you so much for reading this first year of my blog, especially the holiday treasures that comprised THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS.  Xmas has long not my favorite time of year, but these songs help get me through and then some every holiday season. 

The song for Day 31 of THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS is my all-time favorite holiday song – “Peace On Earth / Little Drummer Boy” by David Bowie and Bing Crosby, included in the 1977 holiday special, BING CROSBY’S MERRIE OLDE CHRISTMAS.

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I was 10 going on 11 for Xmas 1977, and it was a time where I wasn’t really into music (that would happen in 1979), and I don’t remember anything else about that Bing Crosby variety holiday show, but I’ll never forget the one thing I do remember – “Peace On Earth / Little Drummer Boy.” 

It’s hard to believe now, but that famous duet almost never happened.  When the producers of the show asked David Bowie to sing “Little Drummer Boy” with Bing Crosby, he said no.  David said, “I hate this song.  Is there something else I could sing?”  Of this news, one of the show’s songwriters, Ian Fraser said, “We didn’t quite know what to do.”

From there, Ian Fraser got together with the show’s other songwriter, Larry Grossman, and the show’s scriptwriter, Buz Kohan, and wrote “Peace On Earth” for David Bowie as a counterpoint piece to Bing’s version of “Little Drummer Boy.”

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With less than an hour of rehearsal, Bowie and Bing performed the song, and it was magical.  It was also my first exposure to David Bowie (and my whole family’s, I believe; in 1977, we just had the one TV set in the house).  After the show’s taping, Bing said David Bowie was a “clean-cut kid and a real fine asset to the show.  He sings well, has a great voice and reads lines well.”  David later admitted that he only appeared on the show because “I just knew my mother liked him.”  David also performed his then-new hit, “Heroes,” on the show, but, for some reason, I don’t remember it.

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For five years, “Peace On Earth / Little Drummer Boy” was only available as a bootleg single, but in late November 1982, David’s label at the time, RCA Records, released an official single version of the holiday gem, replete with all the dialogue from the show.  By 1982, David Bowie’s relationship with RCA (his label since 1971’s HUNKY DORY album) was already seriously strained and he was not happy with the record label releasing that song.  He left the label soon thereafter. 

Despite David’s unhappiness about the release of “Peace On Earth / Little Drummer Boy” as a single, it performed very well, reaching No. 3 in Ireland, No. 6 in Norway, and No. 12 in Sweden.  In the U.K., it reached No. 3 and was certified Silver.

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In 1995, I was elated when retro label Oglio Records released the single version on their holiday compilation, THE EDGE OF CHRISTMAS, but also as a stand-alone CD single, with both the single version and the full-length version from the Bing Crosby special.  And, with it being a few years before the Interweb really took off, there was also a CD-ROM of the video from the 1977 show. 

BING CROSBY’S MERRIE OLDE CHRISTMAS was filmed on September 11, 1977.  Nearly five weeks after filming the special (and a month-and-a-half before the special aired), Bing Crosby sadly died of a heart attack at the age of 73.  And now, David Bowie’s gone too.  But, as I’ve been told before, I was lucky enough to be on the same planet as David Bowie for almost 50 years.  And that’s pretty damn cool.

“Peace on Earth, can it be / Years from now, perhaps we’ll see / See the day of glory / See the day when men of good will / Live in peace, live in peace again / Peace on Earth, can it be / Can it be…”

Peace on Earth – can it be?  I’d truly love to think so…

“It’s a pretty thing, isn’t it…”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n9kfdEyV3RQ

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xmas song of the day – “Do They Know It’s Christmas?” | BAND AID | 1984 / 1985.

Happy Holidays!  Since it’s the first year of my blog, and since it’s the last year for my Annual Holiday Show on my little 20-year-old 80s radio program, STUCK IN THE 80s (on WMPG community radio in Portland, Maine), I wanted to present to you THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS, or, 31 of my favorite 80s holiday musical treats.

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The song for Day 30 of THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS is prolly the biggest holiday song of my generation, written and spearheaded by Bob Geldof of The Boomtown Rats and Midge Ure of Ultravox, in response to the TV reports of famine in Ethiopia – “Do They Know It’s Christmas?” by Band Aid.

Bob and Midge first got together about this project in early November 1984, and knew they had a limited time frame to work with, if they wanted to get the song ready for the holiday.  They put the song together, and then started recruiting many of the biggest recording stars in the U.K. and Ireland at the time (save for Chicago’s Jody Watley and Jersey City’s Kool & The Gang, who happened to be on the same record label as The Boomtown Rats and who happened to be in there when Bob Geldof pitched the idea to the label). 

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Bob Geldof (in his “Feed The World” T-shirt) and Midge Ure.

They then asked famed producer Trevor Horn (Frankie Goes To Hollywood, The Art Of Noise) if he would produce, but he told Bob and Midge that he would need at least six weeks to do it, which wouldn’t get the record ready in time for Xmas.  Though Trevor Horn wasn’t able to produce the original single, he did offer a studio for them to use free of charge for 24 hours on Sunday, November 25, 1984, and he later produced and remixed the 12” single for a 1985 re-release.

Nearly 40 recording artists, including members of Duran Duran, U2, Culture Club, The Boomtown Rats, Bananarama, Spandau Ballet, Ultravox and Status Quo, as well as folks like Sting, Paul Young, George Michael, Phil Collins (who played drums on the song) and Paul Weller of The Style Council, participated on the benefit record.  Artists who weren’t able to be there but who sent in recorded messages were David Bowie, Paul McCartney, Holly Johnson of Frankie Goes To Hollywood and Big Country.  These messages were included on the single’s B-side and as part of the 12” extended mix.

It took only a week after recording ended to release “Do They Know It’s Christmas?”  The single had 250,000 advance orders and that number swelled to a million less than a week after its release.  Phonogram (who put out the single in the U.K.) had all five of its European factories working on pressing that one single to help meet demand.

On December 15, 1984, just 12 days after its release, “Do They Know It’s Christmas?” spent the first of its five weeks at No. 1 on the U.K. singles chart.  It was the fastest-selling single in U.K. chart history and sold three million copies in the U.K. alone by the end of 1984.  Until Elton John’s “Candle In The Wind 1997” 13 years later, it was the biggest-selling single of all-time in the U.K.

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Around the globe, the response to “Do They Know It’s Christmas?” was phenomenal.  It also reached No. 1 in Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Germany, Holland, Ireland, Italy, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden and Switzerland.

Over here in the U.S., the video for “Do They Know It’s Christmas?” was played often throughout the holiday season on MTV, and the single was released on December 10, 1984 on Columbia Records.  A few days before Xmas, it debuted on the BILLBOARD Hot 100 at No. 65.  For the first chart in 1985, it shot up to No. 20.  But, despite the fact it was outselling Madonna’s “Like A Virgin” (the No. 1 single then) by a four-to-one margin (selling nearly two million copies in its first eleven days of release), the lack of airplay prevented it from charting any higher than No. 13.  It was gone from the Hot 100 after just nine weeks, departing in mid-February.

Bob Geldof had hoped “Do They Know It’s Christmas?” would raise £70,000 for Ethiopia, but instead, it raised £8 million within a year of its release.  And the support of the Ethiopian famine relief didn’t stop there. 

geldofliveaidIn early March 1985, (mostly) American recording artists teamed up as USA For Africa for the “We Are The World” single and album.  Canadian artists banded together as Northern Lights for “Tears Are Not Enough.”  The LIVE AID concert on July 13, 1985 brought musicians and fans together in London, Philadelphia and around the globe to raise money for famine relief.

“Do They Know It’s Christmas?” was re-recorded three times – in 1989, 2004 and 2014 – all three re-recordings reached No. 1 in the U.K. and all were charity records for Africa (the 1989 and 2004 versions went to famine relief, while the 2014 version raised money for the Ebola crisis in West Africa).bowie-8485

For this Xmas (and always), of course, the best gift I’d love to get is peace, love and understanding, especially for my wealth of family and friends.  I’d also love to see more support for those less fortunate than you or I.  On the 12” single for “Do They Know It’s Christmas?” David Bowie puts out a plea for support: “It’s Christmas 1984, and there are more starving folk on the planet than ever before.  Please give a thought for them this season and do whatever you can, however small, to help them live.  Have a peaceful New Year.” 

“Do They Know It’s Christmas?” (especially the 12” extended mix) will always have a special place in my heart.  And from that 12” single, David Bowie’s plea, 32 years later, still resonates to this day. 

In Maine, there are so many folks in need – of food, heat, medicine, shelter, and affordable health care, for starters.  I’m sure it’s like that all over the US of A, and all over the world.  2016 has been a particularly rough year for a lot of reasons, and I do hope and pray that 2017 will be a peaceful New Year.  But first, Happy Xmas, Happy Hanukkah, or whatever you choose to celebrate, if anything – be safe, have fun and do what you can to help those who won’t have much of either this holiday season…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zc8TYsYb5i0

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xmas song of the day – “Merry Christmas (I Don’t Want To Fight Tonight)” | THE RAMONES | 1987.

Happy Holidays!  Since it’s the first year of my blog, and since it’s the last year for my Annual Holiday Show on my little 20-year-old 80s radio program, STUCK IN THE 80s (on WMPG community radio in Portland, Maine), I wanted to present to you THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS, or, 31 of my favorite 80s holiday musical treats.

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On this date (12.22) in 2002, we lost the legendary Joe Strummer of The Clash.  Four days earlier, I lost my grandfather, Thurman Berry (my Mom’s Dad) to cancer.  And, by this same date in 2002, we had also sadly lost half of the original members of The Ramones (Joey in April 2001 and Dee Dee in June 2002). 

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Johnny Ramone and Joe Strummer, 2001.

This isn’t meant to be a sad post.  On the contrary – for Xmas 1987 (15 years prior to Xmas 2002), The Ramones (with a song written by Joey Ramone) obliged the folks at Sire / Warner Bros. (for the promotional holiday album, YULESVILLE), and put together the Rockin’ holiday gem for Day 28 of THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS – “Merry Christmas (I Don’t Want To Fight Tonight).”

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According to liner notes of the YULESVILLE album, when the powers that be at Sire / Warner Bros. told Joey Ramone about the project, “he rushed home, wrote ‘Merry Christmas (I Don’t Want To Fight Tonight)’ and sent it to us posthaste.  We had barely finished conceptualizing this package, when lo and behold, we received another version souped up with more guitars (!!!), and more Ramone-type singers.”  The band also provided a hilarious Xmas ID for the album.

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“Merry Christmas (I Don’t Want To Fight Tonight)” was released as the B-side (or double-A-side) of the U.K. single for their song, “I Wanna Live” (from their tenth studio album, 1987’s HALFWAY TO SANITY).  “Merry Christmas” would find its way onto the next Ramones studio album, 1989’s BRAIN DRAIN.  There was even a U.K. single remix of the song that ended up on the sweet 1995 Rhino holiday compilation, PUNK ROCK XMAS.

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I can’t say for sure if Joe Strummer liked “Merry Christmas (I Don’t Want To Fight Tonight),” but I would bet my record collection that he did.  I can DEFINITELY say for sure that my Grampy Berry would NOT have liked it.  Truth be told, I don’t ever remember the WWII veteran and longtime fisherman listening to any music, but I think, like my Mom, maybe Country & Western was his music of choice.  Although, it’d be pretty cool to see him jamming to The Ramones.  I sure do miss all of you swell guys…

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A great shot of my grandfather, Thurman Berry, one summer many years ago at Seawall (part of Acadia National Park).  He had no problem letting the seagull there take the bread right out of his fingers…

You know, with spirited lyrics like, “I loved you from the start / ‘Cause Christmas ain’t the time for breaking each other’s heart,” how can you go wrong?!  I heard “Merry Christmas (I Don’t Want To Fight Tonight)” in the grocery store one holiday season not too long ago, I paused to happily listen and I remember feeling, “All is right with the world.”  Let’s hope it stays that way…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Y5GtaTrPHM

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xmas song of the day – “She Won’t Be Home (Lonely Christmas)” | ERASURE | 1988.

Happy Holidays!  Since it’s the first year of my blog, and since it’s the last year for my Annual Holiday Show on my little 20-year-old 80s radio program, STUCK IN THE 80s (on WMPG community radio in Portland, Maine), I wanted to present to you THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS, or, 31 of my favorite 80s holiday musical treats.

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There were many great traditional holiday cover songs released during the 80s, but there were also many wonderful original Xmas compositions released as well.  For Day 27 of THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS, it’s one of those wonderful original compositions – “She Won’t Be Home (Lonely Christmas)” by Erasure.

Released in late November 1988, between Erasure’s third studio album, THE INNOCENTS (released earlier in 1988) and their fourth studio effort, 1989’s WILD! album, “She Won’t Be Home” was part of the four-song CRACKERS INTERNATIONAL EP. 

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Here in the U.S. at the time of the EP’s release, CRACKERS INTERNATIONAL was only eligible to chart on the BILLBOARD album chart, and it reached a respectable No. 73.  However, on the U.K. singles chart in 1988, EPs WERE eligible to chart on the singles chart, and the CRACKERS INTERNATIONAL EP (led by “Stop!” and “She Won’t Be Home”) pushed the release to a big No. 2 peak. 

Around the globe, CRACKERS INTERNATIONAL also reached No. 2 in Ireland, and the Top 20 in Austria, Germany and Switzerland.

Back here in the U.S., Erasure was (finally) enjoying their two biggest hits on the BILLBOARD Hot 100 (both songs from THE INNOCENTS album) – “Chains Of Love” (No. 12, October 1988) and “A Little Respect,” (climbing the chart on Xmas Eve 1988, on its way to a No. 14 peak in March 1989).  So, the folks at Sire / Reprise commissioned a special promotional-only 7” single for radio stations with “She Won’t Be Home” on the A-side and Erasure’s stirring version of the traditional “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” on the B-side.

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Somewhere along the way, I snagged myself a copy of this special 7” single, and though it was broken (but still sort of playable), I played it on my early STUCK IN THE 80s Xmas shows on WMPG.  Eventually, like most music, I was able to find a clean(er) version of “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” on the Interweb somewhere, and I didn’t have to take a chance with my broken 7” holiday single anymore.

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“She Won’t Be Home (Lonely Christmas)” could be lumped into the same category of 80s Synthpop / Pop holiday fare as, say, “Last Christmas” by Wham!, but as a big Erasure fan then (and to this day), I’m pretty okay with that.  I’ve loved this holiday gem for a long time…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jc_nLdB_gl4

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xmas song of the day – “The Power Of Love” | FRANKIE GOES TO HOLLYWOOD | 1984.

Happy Holidays!  Since it’s the first year of my blog, and since it’s the last year for my Annual Holiday Show on my little 20-year-old 80s radio program, STUCK IN THE 80s (on WMPG community radio in Portland, Maine), I wanted to present to you THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS, or, 31 of my favorite 80s holiday musical treats.

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The song for Day 26 of THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS is a song I had intended on posting for you before Xmas, but after the terror attacks during the past couple of days in parts of the globe – notably a Christmas market in Berlin, Germany – this was on my mind: “The Power Of Love” by Frankie Goes To Hollywood.fgth-logo

Written by four out of the five members of the Liverpool, England band, “The Power Of Love” was released in mid-November 1984 as the third single from their brilliant double-album debut, WELCOME TO THE PLEASUREDOME. 

Though the song itself has no reference to Christmas itself, the video for “The Power Of Love” depicts the birth of Christ, the single features a reproduction of the 16th Century painting of the Assumption of the Virgin, and, in the process, many folks (including yours truly) considered this to be a Christmas song.

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It only took three weeks from its November 19, 1984 release for “The Power Of Love” to reach No. 1 on the U.K. singles chart.  It gave Frankie Goes To Hollywood their third consecutive No. 1 U.K. hit, following one of the most controversial songs ever (“Relax”) and a Cold War Classic (“Two Tribes”), and gave Frankie the distinction of being only the second act in U.K. singles chart history to reach No. 1 with their first three releases.  The first act, by the way, was Gerry & The Peacemakers, also from Liverpool, and whom Frankie covered on WELCOME TO THE PLEASUREDOME (with “Ferry Cross The Mersey”).  Gerry & Co. did the feat in 1963.

“The Power Of Love” might have spent more than a week at No. 1 on the U.K. singles chart had it not been for the next song to reach No. 1- the charity record by Band Aid, “Do They Know It’s Christmas?”  For nearly thirteen years, that single would become the biggest-selling U.K. single ever until “Candle In The Wind 1997” by Elton John.

Around the globe, “The Power Of Love” was a Top 10 hit in at least Australia, Austria, Germany, Holland, Ireland, Italy, New Zealand and Switzerland, and was certified Gold in the U.K. and Italy.  It was re-issued in 1993 and reached No. 10 in the U.K., and a 2000 remix reached No. 6.

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The gatefold version of “The Power Of Love” 12″ single I picked up back in the day.  In the lower left corner, it reads, appropriately enough, “Thou shalt not bend.”

Sometime after the song’s release, FGTH lead singer (and co-writer) Holly Johnson once said, “I always felt like The Power Of Love was the record that would save me in this life.  There is a biblical aspect to its spirituality and passion; the fact that love is the only thing that matters in the end.”

Dedicated to Berlin and beyond…  #BerlinAndBeyond #ThePowerOfLove #LoveTrumpsHate

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NyoTvgPn0rU

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xmas song of the day – “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)” | U2 | 1987.

Happy Holidays!  Since it’s the first year of my blog, and since it’s the last year for my Annual Holiday Show on my little 20-year-old 80s radio program, STUCK IN THE 80s (on WMPG community radio in Portland, Maine), I wanted to present to you THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS, or, 31 of my favorite 80s holiday musical treats.

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For Day 25 of THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS is one more gem from the 1987 benefit Xmas album, A VERY SPECIAL CHRISTMAS – U2’s cover of “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home).”

The original version of “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)” dates back to November 1963, and a version produced and co-written by Phil Spector, and sung by Darlene Love.  It was intended for Ronnie Spector, but Darlene Love ended up singing the song instead.  (Darlene Love and Ronnie Spector would team up on 1992’s A VERY SPECIAL CHRISTMAS 2 for a cover of Brenda Lee’s 1958 holiday classic, “Rockin’ Around The Christmas Tree”).  Between 1986 and 2014, Darlene Love performed the song 28 times on TV for David Letterman, first on his Late Night NBC show, and then on his Late Show on CBS. 

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A VERY SPECIAL CHRISTMAS producer and then some, Jimmy Iovine, flew to Glasgow, Scotland, to record U2’s cover of “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)” during a soundcheck.  Darlene Love contributed backing vocals on the song she made famous 24 years before.

Since 1987, there have been many covers released of “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home),” including covers from Joey Ramone, Mariah Carey, Jon Bon Jovi, Melissa Etheridge, Death Cab For Cutie, Raveonettes and Cher (who was one of the backing vocalists on the original 1963 version), but it’s the U2 version that has resonated with me this time of year for nearly 30 years…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mmZBC92pgrE

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xmas song of the day – “Merry Christmas Santa Claus (You’re A Lovely Guy)” | MAX HEADROOM | 1986.

Happy Holidays!  Since it’s the first year of my blog, and since it’s the last year for my Annual Holiday Show on my little 20-year-old 80s radio program, STUCK IN THE 80s (on WMPG community radio in Portland, Maine), I wanted to present to you THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS, or, 31 of my favorite 80s holiday musical treats.

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The song for Day 24 of THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS is a rare and special holiday treat from 1986 – “Merry Christmas Santa Claus (You’re A Lovely Guy)” by the witty, occasionally stuttering computer-generated character, Max Headroom (played so well by actor Matt Frewer).

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1986 was a big year for Max (and Matt) – they already scored an international hit with “Paranoimia” (with The Art Of Noise), there was a British cult TV show called THE MAX HEADROOM SHOW in its third and final season, and they were on the verge of an American drama series, MAX HEADROOM, which started in the Spring of 1987 – and Coca-Cola commercials somewhere inbetween.

Not long after the success of “Paranoimia,” Max Headroom did a holiday special in the U.K., MAX HEADROOM’S GIANT CHRISTMAS TURKEY, and from that special, a limited edition 7” holiday single was commissioned and was released on Chrysalis records: “Merry Christmas Santa Claus (You’re A Lovely Guy).”

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Due to the late release of the record, the song did not get a chance to chart anywhere.  I know it’s not a holiday song for everyone, but if you’re a fan like I am, it’s a fun way to spend four minutes this time of year, and I think you’ll love it, “from the top of your Christmas stocking / To the bottom of your Christmas bot-bot-bottom!”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jz37ydMSuq8

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xmas song of the day – “Same Old Lang Syne” | DAN FOGELBERG | 1981.

Happy Holidays!  Since it’s the first year of my blog, and since it’s the last year for my Annual Holiday Show on my little 20-year-old 80s radio program, STUCK IN THE 80s (on WMPG community radio in Portland, Maine), I wanted to present to you THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS, or, 31 of my favorite 80s holiday musical treats.

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The song for Day 23 of THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS is “Same Old Lang Syne” by Dan Fogelberg, and was released in December 1980, several months in advance of his seventh studio album, a double album titled, THE INNOCENT AGE. 

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Debuting at No. 75 on the BILLBOARD Hot 100 twelve days before Xmas, “Same Old Lang Syne” reached the Top 40 a couple days after Xmas.  Though the story song takes place on Xmas Eve, Dan Fogelberg never actually intended to be a holiday song.

As Dan Fogelberg said on his website in 2003, the song was autobiographical.  He was visiting family back in his home of Peoria, Illinois in the mid-1970s, and he ran into an old girlfriend of his in a convenience store. same-old-lang-syne

“Same Old Lang Syne” would go on to spend two weeks at its peak position of No. 9 on the Hot 100 in late February 1981 and stuck around on the chart until early April 1981.

Dan Fogelberg had made Maine his home for decades and was living in Deer Isle, Maine when he sadly passed away from prostate cancer this week (on December 16) in 2007, at the age of 56.  The saxophone solo at the end of “Same Old Lang Syne” was performed by Jazz great Michael Brecker, who also passed away in 2007. 

A week after Dan passed away, the old girlfriend in the song, Jill Anderson Greulich, told her story in the PEORIA JOURNAL STAR (the daily newspaper of Peoria, Illinois).  She confirmed the story about meeting Dan in the convenience store on Xmas Eve, drinking the six-pack and talking in her car for two hours.  When she heard the song on the radio, she kept it to herself (and knew that Dan would never disclose her identity).  She also didn’t want a reveal to cause any issues with his marriage. 

In the 35 years since the release of “Same Old Lang Syne,” it has remained not only as a favorite for radio stations during the holiday season, but as a personal favorite, especially this time of year. 

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Dan Fogelberg in Maine, taken by his wife, Jean…

Just a few days ago, Sam Anderson of the NEW YORK TIMES wrote a lovely piece about “Same Old Lang Syne” (a “letter of recommendation,” as he worded it), and of the song, he said, “Only one holiday song is worth a precious fraction of your rapidly dwindling time on earth: Dan Fogelberg’s 1980 ballad ‘Same Old Lang Syne,’ a light-rock radio classic that deconstructs all the usual eggnog conventions and reassembles them into a proper work of art – something like a Raymond Carver story crossed with ‘Escape (The Piña Colada Song)’ [by Rupert Holmes] crossed with T.S. Eliot’s ‘Four Quartets.’  Like the holiday season itself, Fogelberg’s song is simultaneously hilarious, sad, beautiful, corny and transcendent.”

And, much like the weather in “Same Old Lang Syne,” today’s snow here in Central Maine will turn into tomorrow’s rain, and I’ll think of Dan, and his unintentional holiday gem…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=27INql8fvt0

Image: Dan Fogelberg

xmas song of the day – “Talking Christmas Goodwill Blues” | JOHN WESLEY HARDING | 1989.

Happy Holidays!  Since it’s the first year of my blog, and since it’s the last year for my Annual Holiday Show on my little 20-year-old 80s radio program, STUCK IN THE 80s (on WMPG community radio in Portland, Maine), I wanted to present to you THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS, or, 31 of my favorite 80s holiday musical treats.

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For Day 22 of THE 31 DAYS OF 80s XMAS SONGS, it’s a holiday gem from 1989 called “Talking Christmas Goodwill Blues,” an original Xmas song by Wesley Stace – a recording artist who picked up his stage name, John Wesley Harding, from the 1967 Bob Dylan album of the same name.

“Talking Christmas Goodwill Blues” is from John’s debut release on Sire / Reprise Records, GOD MADE ME DO IT – THE CHRISTMAS EP, a five-track EP which also features an interview with John (or, “A Cosy Promotional Chat,” as it’s referred to on the EP), the title song from his 1990 full-length Sire / Reprise debut, HERE COMES THE GROOM, and an amazing acoustic cover of Madonna’s “Like A Prayer.”

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The song starts about how the song came about: “Well, I flew to LA for the very first time / I met [President of Reprise Records] Howie Klein and [Sire Records co-founder] Seymour Stein / They said ‘Wes, we do this Christmas thing / And we get all the acts to sing’ / I said: ‘What do you want? / You want a cover of ‘Winter Wonderland’ or something?’ / They said ‘Do what you like’ / So this is called ‘Talking Christmas Goodwill Blues’…”

Something I’ve always loved about John Wesley Harding (who is now performing under his real name, Wesley Stace) is his smart, honest lyrics and his inability to bullshit.

“…spare a thought when you give the gifts / For the people doing Christmas shifts / Because Christmas is a time for giving / Like lifetime is a time for living…”

“Well they say that money’s taking over / And no one wants a cheap legover or  pullover / They say that when any bell rings / One of God’s children gets his wings [ping!] / Talking of wings, there’s a sign in LAX / That says ‘495 shopping days till the Christmas after this one!’ / Buy now, cry later…”

“John Wesley Harding’s the name and this is the groove / He was never known to make a foolish move / Watch out for the record when it hits the shelves / Happy Christmas / Enjoy your elves!”

I saw the CD version of the EP for the first time about 16 years ago, and just had to have it, and haven’t seen it anywhere since, so I suppose it’s a good thing I picked it up.  “Talking Christmas Goodwill Blues” is one of the reasons I’ve loved bringing my annual 80s Xmas shows to the Portland, Maine airwaves and beyond, mainly because I don’t immediately know of any other station that would play such a non-traditional holiday treasure, and I’m more than happy to oblige…

“That’s all folks!”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PrL1_gyG4MU

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