This year, with Christmas Day on Sunday, I'd imagine all the seasonal songs will be locked away by the start of the morning commute on Monday.You do, be it a music library or streaming platform. B101 has when Christmas falls right before a weekend sometimes, but otherwise, no one of significance (and I’m specifically leaving out what religious stations do).
As a Christian who follows the liturgical calendar, I appreciate the option of listening to Christmas music during the latter 10 days of the Christmas season. On Dec. 26, I listen to Heart Xmas (UK) and Sky Radio Christmas (Netherlands). From Dec. 27, I listen to mostly classical Christmas music, the majority of which is religious. I listen to a playlist of classical Christmas music and albums of choral music via YouTube Music. I will also be listening to WJMJ in the coming Christmas season.Noncommercial WJMJ Hartford, CT, keeps the music -- secular and religious alike -- going for the full twelve days. They at least have religious justification. I can't imagine any sane radio programmer thinking there'd be any value or listener goodwill to be gained by pumping out Burl Ives, Jose Feliciano and Mariah past early Dec. 26. I see posters on this board calling for post-holiday ho-ho every year. It's a peculiar form of radio geekhood that I just can't wrap my head around.
At least one station I'm familiar with used to play Christmas music from Thanksgiving Day through until New Years Day. This was before stations started playing holiday content as early as November 1 so people were tired of it by the time Christmas rolled around. Their thinking was that the Christmas season began on Thanksgiving and Black Friday kicked the holiday shopping season into high gear. Once Christmas was over, kids are still out of school, families are still visiting with relatives and most everyone still has their lights on and some holiday gatherings occurred through New Years Eve, so they kept the Christmas content going until New Years day.
Classical and choral Christmas music is beautiful, stirring and timeless. My radio listening includes a good amount of classical music from SiriusXM and the Vermont Public Classical local station, WNCH. Both will sprinkle in "Messiah" excerpts, Christmas Oratorio, Nutcracker bits, and various choral pieces associated with Christmas during their regular programming year-round. What I don't get is how anyone, even Christians such as yourself, would want to hear "Holly Jolly Christmas" or "All I Want for Christmas Is You" during the next 11 days of the liturgical calendar, much less "Frosty the Snowman" or "Jingle Bell Rock," songs that have become timeless in a negative way.As a Christian who follows the liturgical calendar, I appreciate the option of listening to Christmas music during the latter 10 days of the Christmas season. On Dec. 26, I listen to Heart Christmas (UK) and Sky Radio Christmas (Netherlands). From Dec. 27, I listen to mostly classical Christmas music, the majority of which is religious. I listen to a playlist of classical Christmas music and albums of choral music via YouTube Music. I will also be listening to WJMJ in the coming Christmas season.
As I implied previously, after Dec. 26, my focus is on the Christ-centered Christmas songs. Santa, Rudolph, and Frosty have their place during the Christmas shopping season and on Christmas Day; however, after that, they're gone from my audio devices until next November.What I don't get is how anyone, even Christians such as yourself, would want to hear "Holly Jolly Christmas" or "All I Want for Christmas Is You" during the next 11 days of the liturgical calendar, much less "Frosty the Snowman" or "Jingle Bell Rock," songs that have become timeless in a negative way.
You probably won't enjoy WJMJ's post-Dec. 25th programming, then, for it will sound just like it sounded a few hours ago -- sacred and secular reconciled. It is a far deeper assortment than most stations offer, though:As I implied previously, after Dec. 26, my focus is on the Christ-centered Christmas songs. Santa, Rudolph, and Frosty have their place during the Christmas shopping season and on Christmas Day; however, after that, they're gone from my audio devices until next November.
| 10:19 | Candese Marchese - Christmas Card (For Sandy Hook) |
| 10:15 | Doris Day - Be A Child At Christmastime |
| 10:12 | Pointer Sisters - Santa Claus Is Coming To Town |
| 10:07 | BeBe & CeCe Winans - Hark The Herald Angels Sing |
| 09:56 | Kathy Mattea - Christmas Collage |
| 09:53 | Chicago - Silent Night |
| 09:49 | John, Yoko & The Plastic Ono Band - Happy Christmas (War Is Over) |
| 09:46 | Aretha Franklin - Joy To The Word |
| 09:41 | Jim Reeves - Silver Bells |
| 09:35 | Gloria Estefan - Love On Layaway |
| 09:32 | Smokey Robinson and the Miracles - Jingle Bells |
| 09:29 | Rod Stewart - Red-Suited Super Man |
| 09:25 | Carpenters - Medley: Here Comes Santa/Frosty/Rudolph The Red Nose |
| 09:21 | Dean Martin - Rudolph The Red Nosed Reindeer |
| 09:18 | Boston Pops - Sleigh Ride |
WJMJ has the best DJ lineup just about anywhere, Jerry Kristafer in the morning, Glen Colligan from the YZ days and Friendly Floyd from DRC, doesn't get much better than that!You probably won't enjoy WJMJ's post-Dec. 25th programming, then, for it will sound just like it sounded a few hours ago -- sacred and secular reconciled. It is a far deeper assortment than most stations offer, though:
10:19 Candese Marchese - Christmas Card (For Sandy Hook) 10:15 Doris Day - Be A Child At Christmastime 10:12 Pointer Sisters - Santa Claus Is Coming To Town 10:07 BeBe & CeCe Winans - Hark The Herald Angels Sing 09:56 Kathy Mattea - Christmas Collage 09:53 Chicago - Silent Night 09:49 John, Yoko & The Plastic Ono Band - Happy Christmas (War Is Over) 09:46 Aretha Franklin - Joy To The Word 09:41 Jim Reeves - Silver Bells 09:35 Gloria Estefan - Love On Layaway 09:32 Smokey Robinson and the Miracles - Jingle Bells 09:29 Rod Stewart - Red-Suited Super Man 09:25 Carpenters - Medley: Here Comes Santa/Frosty/Rudolph The Red Nose 09:21 Dean Martin - Rudolph The Red Nosed Reindeer 09:18 Boston Pops - Sleigh Ride
I'll take that bet, you're gonna regret ....Though Christmas Day in 2022 is on a Sunday, the official Federal Holiday is on Monday, Dec. 26th. I would bet that radio stations will continue Christmas music through Monday.
NopeThough Christmas Day in 2022 is on a Sunday, the official Federal Holiday is on Monday, Dec. 26th. I would bet that radio stations will continue Christmas music through Monday.