Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Radio Stations Hungry For New Christmas Songs But Find Few Enduring Hits

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Dec, 2015 11:15 AM
    TORONTO — The sounds of the holiday season are pretty much the same from year to year: "Feliz Navidad," "Baby, It's Cold Outside" and "White Christmas" on constant rotation in supermarkets, department stores and coffee shops.
     
    New Christmas-themed pop songs do appear every year, and Thunder Bay, Ont.-native Paul Shaffer says it's no surprise why artists keep trying to record a new modern classic.
     
    "Everybody wants one, of course, because it comes back year after year," says Shaffer, who notes it's not easy to write an enduring holiday song and admits he's failed several times.
     
    "You're talking to somebody who has written about four or five of them, including a followup to 'It's Raining Men' with The Weather Girls, which was called 'Dear Santa (Bring Me a Man This Christmas)'," says Shaffer.
     
    "It didn't click like 'It's Raining Men'."
     
     
    Shaffer followed that up with another stab at holiday fare, a tongue-in-cheek tune called "Kung Fu Christmas."
     
    "Because kung fu was so hot in R&B at the time," explains Shaffer, who regards "A Christmas Gift For You From Phil Spector" as the "holy grail" of holiday albums.
     
    Shaffer was also part of the celebrity ensemble — including comic Bill Murray and former Phantom Planet drummer Jason Schwartzman — that recorded "Alone on Christmas Day" with French rock band Phoenix for the new Netflix special "A Very Murray Christmas."
     
    Mariah Carey's "All I Want for Christmas is You" is perhaps the best and biggest example of a modern holidays hit — none others have come close in the roughly 20 years since it was released.
     
    For the most part, the old classics hold their ground while newer tunes come and go.
     
     
    "It's scary (how) the vast majority of (new holidays) songs become disposable. They really do," says Wendy Duff, program director at Toronto's 98.1 CHFI, which has been playing Christmas music 24 hours a day since Nov. 15. Classics from Nat King Cole, Bing Crosby and Burl Ives remain "the core," despite a regular influx of fresh material.
     
    "It doesn't mean they're not strong, but they just don't have the staying power."
     
    She notes this year's new holiday-themed releases include albums from Jann Arden, Train, and LeAnn Rimes, as well as a fresh cover single from Seal.
     
    Canuck pop star Carly Rae Jepsen also entered the fray this year with a cover of Wham!'s "Last Christmas," itself a relatively new classic that has become a holiday staple for many children of the '80s. 
     
    Jepsen says she was drawn to "a melancholy" aspect of the song.
     
    "All of my favourite Christmas songs have an element to that, whether it's 'Blue Christmas' or 'Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas,'" says Jepsen in a recent interview.
     
     
    "'I'll be Home for Christmas' has a sort of sad longing and yearning, which is something that I think we all sometimes feel over the holidays. It's not as talked about — it's usually, like, hot cocoa and family and Christmas. But there's sometimes a bit of heartbreak involved in that, too.
     
    "I've definitely gone through a breakup right before Christmas, where I felt none of the jolly sort of 'Jingle Bells' (songs) were doing it for me. And I think it's nice to have a song like this, because I think more people relate than you realize."
     
    Duff says modern songs seeking airplay should blend easily with the classics, since it's the old chestnuts that generally keep audiences listening.
     
    "It's got to fit in — we still play Andy Williams. It's such a unique time of year when a playlist can span 50 years," she says.
     
    "On paper, it looks ridiculous.... But it seems to work."
     
    And while there are complaints as soon as Christmas music begins being piped into public places, clearly many look forward to it.
     
    Duff says her radio station's online streams jumped 82 per cent since CHFI switched to holiday mode.
     
    And comedian Aziz Ansari, for one, loves it.
     
     
    "I'm really into the commercialization of Christmas — trees, lights, gifts, all that stuff — (and) Christmas music," the "Master of None" star said earlier this year, just as the season ramped up.
     
    "It's just fun. What other season has its own soundtrack?"

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    DNA analysis to help identify occupant of Greece tomb

    DNA analysis to help identify occupant of Greece tomb
     After the discovery of a human skeleton at the Amphipolis burial complex in northern Greece this week, the focus of experts has turned to the DNA testing...

    DNA analysis to help identify occupant of Greece tomb

    New world record set with 333 km/hour bicycle ride

    New world record set with 333 km/hour bicycle ride
    French daredevil Francois Gissy set a new world record for the highest speed attained while riding a bicycle - reaching a gut churning speed of 333 km/hour in 4.8 seconds....

    New world record set with 333 km/hour bicycle ride

    'Love hormone' shoo away fear

    'Love hormone' shoo away fear
    “Under Oxytocin's influence, the expectation of recurrent fear subsequently abates to a greater extent,” explained Rene Hurlemann from....

    'Love hormone' shoo away fear

    How late developers can change their destiny

    How late developers can change their destiny
    My teachers always told my parents: "Er, he's probably a late developer." Years later, I'm beginning to ask how late is late, exactly? This side of the after-life?

    How late developers can change their destiny

    What Did Ancient Romans Eat? Varied Diet Found From Pompeii Latrines, Sewers

    What Did Ancient Romans Eat? Varied Diet Found From Pompeii Latrines, Sewers
    ROME — Archaeologists picking through latrines, sewers, cesspits and trash dumps at Pompeii and Herculaneum have found tantalizing clues to an apparently varied diet there before the eruption of Mount Vesuvius destroyed those Roman cities in 79 A.D.

    What Did Ancient Romans Eat? Varied Diet Found From Pompeii Latrines, Sewers

    Manhattan Chef Aiming For Guinness Gingerbread House World Record: 1020 Sugary Homes

    Manhattan Chef Aiming For Guinness Gingerbread House World Record: 1020 Sugary Homes
    NEW YORK — Special materials are going into the most colorful New York real estate development: 3,550 pounds of royal icing, 700 pounds of candy and 600 pounds of dough.

    Manhattan Chef Aiming For Guinness Gingerbread House World Record: 1020 Sugary Homes