I spent much of the day at a relative's house. There, I heard WMJI, non-stop from 1:20 pm until 6:00pm. Their Christmas music turned out to be good background music. During that time, we heard "Rockin' Around The Christmas Tree" by Brenda Lee twice. There were other songs that we heard more than once, but not by the same artist. For example, "Jingle Bell Rock. We heard "Holly Jolly Christmas, first by the original hit maker of that song, Burl Ives, and later, an inferior version by someone else.
I thought about what might, or might not, have happened if some "alternative", particularly, relatively new (21st century) Christmas tunes, would have been aired.
It was almost wall-to-wall music, prompting one person at the party to ask if this was radio or a CD. WMJI aired a few sweeps, and ads were limited to a few quick sweep-like announcements. Not being able to hear everything clearly through the kitchen table-talk I, often, didn't know if I heard a sponsorship or not.
Missing were some tried-and-true Christmas classics. I didn't hear "The Little Drummer Boy" by The Harry Simeone Chorale, a Christmastime must in decades past. Also, no version of "Silent Night - Holy Night" in any version. The double-whammy of secularism and a faster-paced society may have taken care of that (Too bad. Too bad.).
There was no Alvin & The Chipmunks with their "Christmas Song" nor one I would have really loved to hear, "Snoopy's Christmas" by The Royal Guardsmen. There was no "I Believe In Father Christmas" by Greg Lake and the more recent "Christmas Eve/Sarajevo 12/24 by The Trans-Siberian Orchestra, (originally credited to the Metal band Savatage). this list could go on.
There are some Christmas recordings that, imho, no one else but the original hit artist should be, or have been, recorded. These include, but aren't necessarily limited to:
"Jingle Bell Rock" by BOBBY HELMS
"Holly Jolly Christmas" by BURL IVES
"I Believe In Father Christmas" by GREG LAKE
"Rockin' Around The Christmas Tree" by BRENDA LEE
"Happy Christmas (War Is Over)" by JOHN & YOKO/THE PLASTIC ONO BAND with the Harlem Community Choir
I thought about what might, or might not, have happened if some "alternative", particularly, relatively new (21st century) Christmas tunes, would have been aired.
It was almost wall-to-wall music, prompting one person at the party to ask if this was radio or a CD. WMJI aired a few sweeps, and ads were limited to a few quick sweep-like announcements. Not being able to hear everything clearly through the kitchen table-talk I, often, didn't know if I heard a sponsorship or not.
Missing were some tried-and-true Christmas classics. I didn't hear "The Little Drummer Boy" by The Harry Simeone Chorale, a Christmastime must in decades past. Also, no version of "Silent Night - Holy Night" in any version. The double-whammy of secularism and a faster-paced society may have taken care of that (Too bad. Too bad.).
There was no Alvin & The Chipmunks with their "Christmas Song" nor one I would have really loved to hear, "Snoopy's Christmas" by The Royal Guardsmen. There was no "I Believe In Father Christmas" by Greg Lake and the more recent "Christmas Eve/Sarajevo 12/24 by The Trans-Siberian Orchestra, (originally credited to the Metal band Savatage). this list could go on.
There are some Christmas recordings that, imho, no one else but the original hit artist should be, or have been, recorded. These include, but aren't necessarily limited to:
"Jingle Bell Rock" by BOBBY HELMS
"Holly Jolly Christmas" by BURL IVES
"I Believe In Father Christmas" by GREG LAKE
"Rockin' Around The Christmas Tree" by BRENDA LEE
"Happy Christmas (War Is Over)" by JOHN & YOKO/THE PLASTIC ONO BAND with the Harlem Community Choir
