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Christmas Songs & Singles. This index lists the essential songs (not all the songs) contained on the albums reviewed in my Christmas section, plus singles, album tracks, or one-hit wonders not otherwise included on those albums. Whenever
possible, the artist's name is linked to my review of the best Christmas album (not necessarily
the only or original album) on which to find the song.
Barring that, the names will be linked to a place where you may buy the song
(usually Amazon).
If there's no link, it means that, to my knowledge, the song is not available
on any CD. Of course, the list will expand as I write more reviews. And, nothing's
perfect - especially me and my crazy list. Please send additions, corrections,
criticisms, and suggestions via email.
- C-H-R-I-S-T-M-A-S
- C-H-R-I-S-T-M-A-S (Yobs, 1980)
- Cajun Christmas (Monty & Marsha
Brown, circa 1968)
- Call Me For Christmas (Gary U.S. Bonds,
1963)
- Calling It Christmas (Elton
John & Joss Stone, 2005)
- Can This Be Christmas (Falcons, 1957)
- Cancel Christmas (Rocket From The
Crypt, 1993)
- Candy Cane Children (White Stripes, 1998)
Originally released on Flying Bomb Records' EP (1998), which also included also includes "Santa
Ain't Coming For Christmas" by Rocket 455 and "Sidewalk Santa" by
the Blowtops. The White Stripes released the song as a single in 2002 backed
by Meg White's reading of "The Store Of The Magi." A heavy-metal-punk-rock-blues-stomp
fairly typical of Jack & Meg's oeuvre, "Candy Cane Children" has
never released on compact disc.
- Candy Cane Sugary Plum (Danny & The Juniors, 1960)
- Candy Kid (Cowsills, 1968)
- Captain Santa Claus (And His Reindeer
Space Patrol) (Bobby
Helms, 1957)
This crazy kiddie cut was the original b-side of Helm's iconic original Decca
recording of "Jingle Bell Rock." Among other things, "Captain
Santa Claus" features rocket ship sound effects that are clearly some
guy swooshing noisily into a microphone. Priceless stuff, but it has only been
issued on CD once - on Bear Family's Fraulein:
The Classic Years 2-CD set.
- Careless Santa (Mono Puff, 1996)
- Caroling Caroling (Nat King Cole, 1960)
- Cashing In On Christmas (Bad News, 1987)
- CB Santa (Homemade Santa, 1976)
- Carols Those Kids Used To Sing (Statler Brothers, 1978)
- Celebrate! (Whooping Cranes, 1987)
- Cha-Cha All The Way (Capitol Studio
Orchestra, 1958)
- Change At Christmas (Say It Isn't So) (Flaming Lips,
2003)
- The Chanukah Song (Adam
Sandler, 1996)
Saturday Night alumnus Sandler included this original paean to famous Jews on
his comedy album, What
The Hell Happened To Me! Despite the song's status as a perennial radio favorite,
it has never been included on a holiday compilation. On his 1999 album, Stan
and Judy's Kid, Sandler unveiled "The Chanukah Song, Part Two." Listen
closely to the original song and you'll hear Sandler refer to the Festival Of
Lights as "eight crazy nights" - later the title of his 2002 animated
film, the soundtrack of
which features "The Chanukah Song, Part Three." Incidentally, Sandler
performed an honest-to-goodness Christmas song, "Santa Don't Like Bad Boys," to
introduce a 1993 episode of SNL - but it's never been commercially issued anywhere.
- Cherry Tree Carol (Emmylou Harris, 2004)
- Child Of God (Bobby Darin, 1960)
- Child Of Winter (Christmas Song) (Beach
Boys, 1974)
- Child's Christmas Saving The Whales (Game Theory, 1989)
- Chipmunk Song (Christmas Don't Be Late)
- Christmas (Buzz Of Delight featuring Matthew
Sweet, 1983)
- Christmas (Dillon
Fence, 1991)
This pleasant-though-uncompelling jangle pop band from North Carolina actually
released this holiday song as their debut recording. Just three songs comprise
the Christmas EP,
one of which would would soon serve as the title song of their full-length debut, Rosemary,
on Mammoth Records in 1992. Later, "Christmas" was featured on Atlantic
Records' alternative Christmas compilation, You
Sleigh Me. [read more]
- Christmas (Fuzzy,
1996)
A Beantown-based band fronted by two women, Fuzzy walked a fine line between
folk, rock, power pop, and noisy grunge. "Christmas" is an uncharacteristically
mopey ballad decrying a loveless holiday season. "Its colder in this house
than anywhere in Boston," claims the singer, but "that's okay, Christmas
means little to me." Methinks she protests too much.... Written by outsider
Florence Dore, "Christmas" was originally released in an acoustic version
on the band's Lemon
Rind EP. A full-blown electric rendition closes Fuzzy's sophomore effort, Electric
Juices, which, incidentally, also contains a killer cover of the Beach Boys' "Girl
Don't Tell Me."
- Christmas (from Tommy)
(The
Who, 1969)
The Who's "Christmas" explains why Tommy, the eponymous protagonist
of Pete Townshend's celebrated rock opera, cannot celebrate the titular
holiday. "Tommy doesn't know what day it is," Townsend protests. Further, "He
doesn't know who Jesus was or what praying is," leading to the ultimate
question: "How can he be saved?" Musically, "Christmas" is
best heard within the ambitious framework of Tommy -
explaining, perhaps, why it has never been excerpted on any Christmas collection.
- Christmas Ain't Christmas New Year's Ain't New Year's Without The One You
Love
- Christmas All Over Again (Tom Petty & The
Heartbreakers, 1992)
- Christmas Alone (Red Sovine, 1950)
- Christmas Alphabet (McGuire
Sisters, 1954)
- Christmas And You (Joni James,
1953)
- Christmas Angel (Cranes, 1997)
- Christmas As I Knew It (Johnny Cash,
1963)
- Christmas At CBGB's (Baghdaddios, 1998)
"Back
in December of '98 we decided (at the last minute) to put out a cute little
holiday punk single, "Christmas At CBGB's." What the hell, we
were so in love with the place... I mean, they always made us feel
at home, and we were in a fun-ass mood when I wrote the song a year-and-a-half
before. Recording it was almost an afterthought... Paul Zlotucha and I were
just tooling around in the studio when I said, "Hey, I just happen to have
the words here... why don't you give this a shot with me?" I
dunno, it just seemed like the thing to do. So Paul and I tried a couple of
takes, and it just fell into place. We added the rest of the instruments
(and vocals) later. At that point we needed a b-side,
and our retarded version of "Auld Lang Syne" (which we hadn't
tried in, like, three or four years!) popped into my mind. "Why not?" I
thought, and so we did it. A little long at the end, but other than that, pretty
damn fine." - Kenn Rowell
- Christmas At Home (Webb Pierce, 1965)
- Christmas At Midnight (Leadbelly,
1944)
- Christmas At The Zoo (Flaming
Lips, 1995)
- Christmas Auld Lang Syne (Bobby Darin,
1960)
- Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)
- Christmas Blues
- Christmas Blues
- Christmas Blues (Canned Heat, 1968)
- Christmas Blues (Larry Darnell,
1950)
- Christmas Blues (Washboard Pete,
1948)
- Christmas Blues (Big Joe Williams, 1963)
- Christmas Boogie (Davis Sisters featuring
Skeeter Davis, 1953)
- Christmas Boogie (Sugar Chile Robinson,
1950)
- Christmas Boogie (T.Rex, 1973)
- Christmas
Bop (Marc Bolan, 1975)
A
gleaming example of glitter rock, "Christmas Bop" was intended as
a solo single by Marc Bolan, lead singer for T.Rex, but the release was cancelled.
Finally released in 1982 as a 7-inch single, the 12-inch version added T.Rex's
delightful 1972 "Fan-Club Xmas Message". More recently, "Christmas
Bop" has been compiled on numerous T.Rex CD retrospectives. Two distinct
versions of the song exist, though I've never been able to ascertain the origin
of the second - readers?
- Christmas Calling (Valerie Masters, 1962)
- Christmas Camel (Procol
Harum, 1967)
- Christmas Can't Be Far Away (Eddy Arnold,
1954)
- Christmas Candles (Andrews Sisters, 1950)
- Christmas Candy (Margaret Whiting & Jimmy Wakely, 1950)
- Christmas Card (Jimmy
Eat World, 1995)
- Christmas Card (They Might Be Giants,
1993)
- Christmas Card From A Hooker In Minneapolis
- Christmas Carol (Tom Lehrer, 1954)
- Christmas Carols By The Old Corral (Tex
Ritter, 1945)
- Christmas Celebration
- Christmas Celebration (Weezer, 2000)
- Christmas Chopsticks (Mel
Blanc, 1951)
- Christmas
Christmas (Cheap Trick, 1996)
Recorded in 1995, this song
was released in 1996 on Gift, a 2-track charity fundraiser
available only in Cheap Trick's hometown of Rockford, Illinois. "Christmas
Christmas," a manic rave-up, is only available on Gift -
look for it on eBay or Musicstack.
The other track, "Come On Christmas" (modeled on their 1977 song, "Come
On Come On") appeared in an extended version on the band's boxed set, Sex
America Cheap Trick (1996).
- Christmas (Comes But Once A Year) (Amos
Milburn, 1960)
- Christmas Comes But Once A Year (Albert
King, 1974)
- Christmas Country Style (Statler Brothers, 1978)
- Christmas Crush (Home Grown,
1997)
- Christmas Dance (Johnny Rabb, 1984)
- Christmas Date Blues (aka Christmas Date Boogie) (Big
Joe Turner with Pete Johnson, 1948)
- Christmas Day (Beach Boys, 1964)
- Christmas Day (Detroit Junior, 1960)
- Christmas Day (Dido, 2001)
- Christmas Day (MXPX, 1999)
- Christmas Day (Linda
Scott, 1961)
- Christmas Day (Sponge, 1996)
- Christmas Day (Squeeze, 1979)
- Christmas Dinner Country Style (Bing Crosby, 1963)
- Christmas Doll (Jim Eanes,
1963)
- Christmas Downer (Departure Lounge,
2000)
- Christmas Dragnet (Stan Freberg,
1953)
- Christmas Dreams (Johnny Moore's Three
Blazers, 1956)
- Christmas Dressed In Blue (Iceberg
Slim, 1994)
- Christmas Eve (Galaxies, 1965)
- Christmas Eve (Sentinals, 1962)
- Christmas Eve Blues (Blind
Lemon Jefferson, 1928)
- Christmas Eve Can Kill You (Everly Brothers,
1972)
- Christmas Everyday
- Christmas Everyday (Maybe It'll Help) (Giant
Sand, 1988)
- Christmas Fantasy (John Fahey, 1975)
- Christmas Fever (Charlélie Coutoure,
1981)
- Christmas Finds Me Oh So Sad (Charles
Brown, 1960)
- Christmas For Cowboys (John Denver,
1975)
- Christmas For The Free (Argent,
1973)
Known
(unjustly) as a one-hit-wonder for their 1972 glam rock smash, "Hold Your
Head Up," Argent released this gentle, utopian holiday ode on their 1973
LP, In
Deep. The song also served as the b-side to "God
Gave Rock and Roll To You," a Top 20 single in the UK. Written former Zombies
Rod Argent and Chris White, then sung by Argent guitarist Russ Ballard, "Christmas
For The Free" has
never shown up on a Christmas album per se, though it is often
compiled
with other semi-popular Argent tracks on albums like Hold
Your Head Up (2001).
- Christmas Gift (Margie Joseph, 1976)
- Christmas Griping (REM, 1991)
- Christmas Heart (June Christy, 1961)
- Christmas Here (Could Never Be Like That) (Wednesday
Week, 1984)
- Christmas Holiday (Frankie Avalon,
1962)
- Christmas I'll Be Home (Vipers, 1986)
- Christmas In A Honky Tonk (Bill & Bonnie
Hearne, 1981)
- Christmas In America (Pat Benatar, 2001)
- Christmas In Baghdad (Black Lips, 2007)
- Christmas In Chicago (Leon Russell,
1972)
Leon
Russell penned "Christmas In Chicago" as the b-side to his "Slipping
Into Christmas," releasing the single on his Shelter Records in 1972. "Christmas
In Chicago" is defensibly the better song - certainly it's the least weird
- conforming to a more traditional blue structure and featuring some snappy lap
steel licks. All the same, the eerie a-side slipped up to #4 on the Billboard
Christmas chart. Oddly, Russell has never included either song on one of his
albums, nor has he licensed them for inclusion elsewhere. DCC Records did, however,
release the songs on a promotional CD single to publicize their 1989 reissue
of Russell's Shelter catalog.
- Christmas In El Paso (Dash
Rip Rock, 1990)
- Christmas In Fallujah (Cass Dillon, 2007)
- Christmas In Fallujah (Jefferson Pepper, 2005)
- Christmas In Heaven (Monty
Python, 1983)
- Christmas In Heaven (Billy Ward & The
Dominoes, 1953)
- Christmas In Hollis (Run-D.M.C.,
1987)
These
prototypical rappers were at their creative peak when they recorded "Christmas
In Hollis." Initially released on Profile Records' Christmas
Rap as well as on a 45-rpm single, the song was also featured on A
Very Special Christmas. Later, it was compiled on Together
Forever: Greatest Hits 1983-1991 (1991) and Greatest
Hits (2002). In 1998, Arista Records released "Christmas In Hollis" on
a special, clear promotional CD single () in anticipation of the group's comeback, Crown
Royal (1999).
- Christmas In Jail (Youngsters,
1956)
- Christmas In Jail (Ain't That A Pain) (Leroy
Carr, 1929)
- Christmas In Jamaica (Brent Dowe, circa
1966)
- Christmas In Killarney (Bing Crosby,
1951)
- Christmas In Love (Firefall, 1982)
- Christmas In My Soul (Laura
Nyro, 1970)
- Christmas In New Orleans (Louis Armstrong,
1955)
- Christmas In New Zealand (Long
Ryders, 1985)
- Christmas In November (Elton Britt, 1962)
- Christmas In Prison
- Christmas In The City (Mary J. Blige,
1997)
- Christmas In The Club (Tom Tom Club, 2002)
- Christmas In The Congo (Marquees,
1959)
- Christmas In The Ghetto (Operation
from The Bottom, 1996)
- Christmas In The Hills (Hylo
Brown, 1963)
- Christmas In The Slammer (Swallows,
2000)
- Christmas In Tunisia (REM, 1994)
- Christmas In Vietnam (Johnny & Jon,
1966)
- Christmas In Washington
- Christmas Is (Tom T. Hall, 1978)
- Christmas Is (Lou Rawls, 1967)
- Christmas Is (Run-D.M.C., 1992)
- Christmas Is A Special Day (Fats Domino,
1993)
- Christmas Is A-Coming
- Christmas Is Cancelled (Farrah, 2005)
- Christmas Is Coming (Alton
Ellis, circa
1968)
- Christmas Is Coming (Vince Guaraldi Trio,
1965)
- Christmas Is Coming (Payolas, 1983)
- Christmas Is Coming (Three Courgettes,
1982)
- Christmas Is Everywhere Except in My Heart (Jimmy
Martin, 1980)
- Christmas Is For Mugs (Graham Parker,
1994)
- Christmas Is Going To The Dogs (The
Eels, 2000)
- Christmas Is Just Another Lonely Day (Ernest
Tubb, 1961)
- Christmas Is Love (James Brown,
1970)
- Christmas Is My Time Of Year (Christmas
Spirit, 1968)
- Christmas Is Near (Ralph Stanley,
2003)
- Christmas Is Saturday (Don Dixon, 2006)
- Christmas Is The Day (Free
Design, 1968)
- Christmas Is The Only Time (I Think Of You) (Wes
Lachot & Chris Stamey, 1993)
- Christmas Is The Season (Jo Stafford,
1964)
- Christmas Is The Time (Lou Rawls, 1993)
- Christmas Is The Time To Be With Your Baby (The
Orchids, 1964)
- Christmas Is The Time To Say I Love You
- Christmas Island
- Christmas Island (Depeche Mode,
1986)
- Christmas Killed Us (Loudflower, 1996)
- Christmas Kisses (Ray Anthony, 1961)
- Christmas Letter (Johnny Moore's Three
Blazers, 1956)
- Christmas Lights (Donna Lewis, 1995)
- Christmas Lights (Montgomery Cliffs, 1999)
- Christmas Like A Lullaby (John Denver, 1990)
- Christmas Love (Rotary Connection, 1968)
- Christmas Love (Dwight Twilley, 1992)
- Christmas Love Song (Tony Bennett,
2004)
- Christmas Lullaby (Shane MacGowan & The Popes,
1996)
- Christmas Lullaby (Smokey Robinson & the Miracles, 1968)
- Christmas Makes Me Hot! (13 Stories, 2006)
- Christmas Moon (Jackie Gleason, 1967)
- Christmas Morning (Lyle
Lovett, 1996)
- Christmas Morning (Titus
Turner, 1952)
- Christmas Morning (Loudon Wainwright III, 1999)
- Christmas Morning Blues (Sonny Boy Williamson, 1938)
The
first Sonny Boy Williamson (real name John Lee Williamson) all but invented blues
harmonica and penned a number of eternal classics - "Good Morning Little School
Girl" foremost among them. He also composed this wonderful yuletide
lament, begging Santa Claus to "bring my baby a lot of toys" - meaning
electric radios, fur coats, and other modern conveniences. "Christmas Morning
Blues," however,
can be tough-to-find. Virgin's All
Time Blues Classics (pictured) is the only CD I've uncovered that contains
the holiday song alongside Sonny Boy's best-known tracks. But, the disc is only
available
in
Spain...
Thankfully,
English label Document Records included "Christmas Morning Blues" on
their stellar 2005 compilation,
Blues
Blues Christmas - also scarce, but absolutely essential.
- Christmas Morning Blues (Victoria Spivey, 1927)
- Christmas Mourning (Julian
Cope, 1988)
- Christmas Must Be Tonight
- Christmas Night (Dwight Twilley, 1992)
- Christmas Night In Harlem (Louis Armstrong,
1955)
- Christmas Night Of The Zombies (MXPX,
2003)
- Christmas 1968 (Happy Christmas) (Beatles,
1968)
- Christmas Number One (The Black Arts, 2007)
- Christmas Of Love (Little Isidore & The
Inquisitors, 2000)
- Christmas On Mars (Groovie Ghoulies, 1992)
- Christmas On Riverside Drive (August Darnell,
1981)
- Christmas On TV (Chris Isaak, 2004)
- Christmas Only Comes Once A Year (MXPX,
1999)
- Christmas Party (Blowfly, 1981)
- Christmas Party (MXPX,
2002)
- Christmas Party (Walkmen,
2004)
- Christmas Passing Through (Roches, 1990)
- Christmas Past (Mike Ireland & Holler, 1997)
- Christmas Plea (Dynamics, 1962)
- Christmas Prayer (Penguins, 1955)
- Christmas Prayer (Valentines,
1955)
- Christmas Presents (Solomon Burke,
1955)
- Christmas Rappin' (Kurtis
Blow, 1979)
- Christmas Reunion (Reno & Smiley,
1963)
- Christmas Ride (Fight, 1994)
- Christmas Sake (Figgs, 1995)
- Christmas
Sing Along With Jose (Bill Dana, 1961)
While writing for "The Steve Allen Show", comedian Bill Dana garnered
a huge break when José Jimenez, a character he created for a Christmas
sketch, became a national sensation. In the sketch - preserved on Rhino's The
Best of José Jimenez - Dana's character played a Puerto Rican Santa
Claus whose hearty laugh was rendered "Jo, Jo, Jo!" Though the dim-witted,
heavily-accented Jimenez - resembling Speedy Gonzalez on quaaludes - can rightfully
be called a racist portrayal, Dana's creation earned wide acclaim, most notably
in the role of a reluctant astronaut while the Mercury space program was in the
news. Dana revisited the holiday season with "Christmas Sing Along With
Jose," a droll rendition of "Jingle Bells" released both as a
single and as part of his album, Jose Jimenez In Orbit -
Bill Dana On Earth. Neither record has ever been reissued on any CD.
- Christmas Song (Angel, 1978)
- Christmas Song (Jethro Tull, 1968)
- Christmas Song (Gilbert
O'Sullivan, 1974)
- Christmas Song (Raveonettes, 2003)
- Christmas Song (Weezer, 2000)
- Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting On An Open Fire)
- Christmas Song Cha Cha (Hugo Winterhalter,
1958)
- Christmas Sound (The Swimmers, 2007)
- Christmas Sounds (Saturday's Children, 1966)
- Christmas Spell (Peggy Lee, 1949)
- Christmas Spirit (Johnny Cash, 1963)
- Christmas Spirit?? (Wailers, 1965)
There's never been a more sour Christmas single than the Sonics/Wailers split 45, "Don't Believe In Christmas" b/w "Christmas Spirit??" The a-side featured the Sonics railing against the entire institution of Christmas, largely for personal
reasons. The Wailers' flip side attacks the holiday for what it reveals about America - our commercialism,
our shallowness, our lack of self-awareness. Told in a droll, Dylanesque twang, "Christmas Spirit??" is
so broad, so bitter, so altogether over-the-top that it just may have been intended as parody. Or, it
may have been an earnest attempt at relevance by an aging party band ("Tall Cool One," 1959).
Either way, it works for me - bah humbug, babe. (Both sides of this infamous single are included on Etiquette's Merry
Christmas From The Sonics, Wailers, Galaxies, a compilation of garage bands from the Pacific northwest,
as well as Rhino's Bummed Out Christmas.)
- Christmas Spirit (aka Christmas Blues) (Julia
Lee & Her Boyfriends, 1947)
- Christmas Stars (Dwight Twilley, 2004)
- Christmas Stylee (Johnny Osbourne & The
Family Group, circa 1966)
- Christmas Swing (Michel Warlop & Orchestre featuring
Django Reinhardt, 1937)
- Christmas Tears
- Christmas Tears (Four Seasons,
1962)
- Christmas Time (BoDeans, 1989)
- Christmas Time (Boss Martians,
1997)
- Christmas Time (Jan Bradley, 1962)
- Christmas Time (Far Too Jones, 1992)
- Christmas
Time (Krayolas, 1980)
The
Krayolas could effortlessly throw down guitar-driven, power pop nuggets like "You're
Not My Girl" and "Cry Cry, Laugh Laugh." That being the case, "Christmas
Time" is an extraordinarily gentle record. The
San Antonio-based "Tex-Mex Beatles" abandon their Rickenbackers and
Ludwigs in favor of synthesizers and carefully constructed harmonies. The end
result - baroque pop infused with melancholy, flirting with dissonance - would
make Brian Wilson smile (pun intended). "It's the happiest day of the year," announces
singer Hector Saldana at the outset. But, by the time the record draws to its
dreary conclusion, he sings of tears and fears on "the loneliest day of
the year." "Christmas Time" is included on Best
Riffs Only: The Krayolas 1977-1988 (2007).
- Christmas Time (Jimmy McCracklin,
1961)
- Christmas Time (Chris Stamey & The dBs,
1986)
- Christmas Time (Again) (Bad Manners, 1989)
- Christmas Time (Beggin' Santa Claus) (Black
Ace, 1937)
- Christmas Time Blues (Guitar Slim & Jelly Belly,
1944)
- Christmas Time Blues (Roy Milton,
1950)
- Christmas Time (Don't Let The Bells End) (The
Darkness, 2003)
- Christmas Time For Everybody But Me (Hank
Ballard & The Midnighters, 1963)
- Christmas Time In The Motor City (Was Not Was,
1981)
- Christmas Time In The Valley (Freddy Fender,
1977)
- Christmas Time Is Here
- Christmas Time Is Here (Heptones, circa
1968)
- Christmas Time Is Here (Ray
Parker Jr., 1984)
- Christmas Time Is Here Again (Beach Boys,
1977)
- Christmas Time (Is Here Again)
- Christmas Time Is Near (Stanley
Brothers, 1958)
- Christmas Time's A-Comin'
- Christmas Time's A-Comin' (Buck Owens,
1965)
- Christmas To New Year's (The
Larks, 1951)
- Christmas Tree On Fire
- Christmas Twist (Syd Straw, 1992)
- Christmas Vacation (Descendents,
1985)
- Christmas Vacation (Mavis Staples,
1989)
- Christmas Vacation (Bobby Vee, 1962)
- Christmas Valley (Walkabouts, 1996)
- Christmas Waltz
- Christmas Will Be Just Another Day (Brenda
Lee, 1964)
- Christmas Will Be Magic Again (International
Language, 1995)
- Christmas Will Really Be Christmas (Lou
Rawls, 1967)
- Christmas Wish (NRBQ, 1979)
- Christmas Wish (Bobby Vee, 1962)
- Christmas Wish (aka My Christmas Wish For You) (Percy Sledge, 1978)
- Christmas With No One To Love (Charles
Brown, 1961)
- Christmas With Satan (James White, 1982)
- Christmas With The Devil (Spinal Tap,
1992)
- Christmas With You (Johnny Cash & June
Carter Cash, 1972)
- Christmas With You (Firehouse, 1995)
- Christmas Won't Be The Same This Year (Jackson
5, 1970)
- Christmas Wrapping (Waitresses, 1981)
- Christmas (Xmas) (Rooks,
1992)
- Christmasland (Tony Bennett, 1968)
- Christmasland (Spongetones, 1991)
- Christmastime (Aimee
Mann & Michael Penn, 2000)
- Christmastime (Smashing Pumpkins,
1997)
- Christmastime Is For Sinners (Mono
Men, 1994)
- Christmastime (Song For Marissa) (Cowsills, 1993)
- Christmastime With You (Cheepskates,
1984)
- Christmasville U.S.A. (Jimmy Charles, 1961)
- Close Your Mouth (It's Christmas) (Free Design, 1968)
- Closing Of The Year (from "Toys") (Wendy & Lisa
with Seal, 1992)
- Cold As Christmas (In The Middle Of The Year) (Elton
John, 1983)
- Come Home For Christmas (David Gates, 1981)
- Come Home For Christmas (Platters,
1963)
- Come On Christmas (Cheap
Trick, 1995)
- Come On Christmas (Saint Etienne, 2003)
- Come On Christmas (Dwight Yoakam, 1997)
- Come On Christmas, Christmas Come On (Ringo
Starr, 1999)
- Come On Santa (Hentchmen, 1997)
- Come On To The Christmas Party (Snowballs aka the J. Geils Band, 1980)
- Comfort & Joy (aka God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen) (Simon & Garfunkel,
1967)
- Comin' Down The Chimney (Sonny Bono & Little Tootsie, 1965)
- Coming Home Christmas (Edward Bear, 1973)
- Coming Home For Christmas (MXPX, 2000)
- Cool Cool Christmas (Sabers, 1955)
- Cool Yule
- Cool Yule (Tony Rondelle Larson,
circa 1960)
- Cool Yule (Rebel Pebbles, 1982)
- Corrido de Auld Lang Syne (Dance Of The New Year) (Little
Bobby Rey & His Band, 1959)
- Countdown To Christmas Party Time (Three
Wise Men, aka XTC, 1983)
- Country Christmas (Patti LaBelle, 1990)
- Coventry Carol (Alison Moyet,
1987)
- Cradle In Bethlehem (Nat King Cole, 1961)
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