25 Days Of Christmas Music 2025: Day 15

Hello, everyone. Welcome back to the countdown.

A sweet vintage Christmas card image from Pinterest. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

Last year this Rankin/Bass TV special turned 60 years old. It also returned to its original network-NBC-after a move to CBS in 1972 where it stayed until 2024. Whether you still watch it on traditional TV, through a streaming service or your own DVD, the tale of a misfit reindeer finding his purpose & his people remains one of the best parts of the Christmas season.

Burl Ives was the voice of the dapper sage snowman, Sam. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

A group of elves and a few reindeer celebrating in song from the TV special. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

A few of the residents on The Island Of Misfit Toys. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

Gene Autry: “Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer” (1949, written by Johnny Marks).

Burl Ives: “Silver & Gold” (1964, written by Johnny Marks).

Burl Ives: “Holly Jolly Christmas” (1964, written by Johnny Marks).

What are some of your favorite Christmas songs?

Until next time, happy listening!!!

25 Days Of Christmas Music 2024: Day 6

Hello, everyone. Welcome back to the countdown.

Day 6

A sweet vintage Christmas card image from Pinterest. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

Guess which beloved holiday special is turning 60 this year? And how many of you feel as old as I do just by reading about that milestone? “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” premiered December 6, 1964 on NBC as an animated TV special and it returns to that network this year for the first time in five decades (It moved to CBS in 1972 where it remained until this year).

Both the song & the TV special are based on a story by New York native Robert L. May who wrote it in 1939 as an in-house advertising copywriter for the department store, Montgomery Ward. It was used as the subject of a free coloring book the store distributed to their shoppers. It was turned into a song in 1949 by May’s brother in law, songwriter Johnny Marks, and performed by Gene Autry the same year.

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Gene Autry

Top: A copy of the 1939 coloring book distributed by Montgomery Ward in 1939 found on the Smithsonian Museum’s website. Bottom: A copy of the 1949 Gene Autry record. (Images found online.  Original sources unknown.)

Coincidentally, this year also marked the 100th birth anniversary of American screenwriter, director and producer Arthur Gardner Rankin, Jr. (July 19, 1924 – January 30, 2014). He & his friend, fellow director and producer, Jules Bass (September 16, 1935 – October 25, 2022) created Rankin/Bass Productions which not only brought Rudolph’s story to life but many others as well including “Santa Claus Is Comin’ to Town”, “Frosty the Snowman” and “The Little Drummer Boy”.

rankin bass logo
rankin bass men

Top: The Rankin/Bass logo. Bottom: The men behind the production team: Arthur Rankin Jr. (L) and Jules Bass (R) circa 1964. (Images found online.  Original sources unknown.)

Marks was brought in to write additional songs for the Rudolph special including two sung by Burl Ives, the voice behind the dapper Sam The Snowman narrator of the TV story. It centered around the reindeer who “had a very shiny nose” which did not fit in with the mainstream crowd, so he ran away. Eventually he found others who felt as different as he including Hermey, the elf who dreamed of being a dentist; arctic prospector Yukon Cornelius & his team of five dogs; Bumble, The Abominable Snow Monster of the North and an entire island of misfit toys. By the show’s end, Rudolph returned home to show that despite being different, he not only found his people but was vital to helping Santa guide his sleigh on Christmas Eve during a terrible snow storm.

Sixty years later, Rudolph’s story & song remain as beloved as ever by “misfits” everywhere.

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Rudolph and Santa
Rudolph and Clairice
Sam the snowman
rudolph corneliuos toys
Abominable
Rudolph group shot

Seven iconic moments related to the 1964 TV special: 1. Burl Ives (L) and songwriter Johnny Marks (R) – along with figurines of Sam The Snowman and Rudolph – circa 1964. 2. Santa and Rudolph. 3. Rudolph and his crush, Clarice. 4. Ives’ Christmas alter ego, Sam The Snowman. 5. Yukon Cornelius and Hermey find the misfit toys on their island. 6. Cornelius encounters Bumble, a/k/a The Abominable Snowman. 7. The gang at the end after Rudolph’s triumphant return home. (Images found online.  Original sources unknown.)

Gene Autry: “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” (1949, written by Johnny Marks).

Burl Ives: “Silver and Gold” (1964, written by Johnny Marks).

Burl Ives: “Holly Jolly Christmas” (1964, written by Johnny Marks).

What are some of your favorite Christmas songs?

Until next time, happy listening!!!

25 Days of Christmas Music 2024: Day 4

Hello, everyone. Welcome back to the countdown.

Santa 3

A sweet vintage Christmas card image from Pinterest. (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

Today’s song turned 90 years old last month & is still a cherished track for the Christmas season. It was written in 1934, recorded first by Harry Reser and His Orchestra but it did not reach the masses until American actor & comedian Eddie Cantor performed it on his radio show in November that year. In the 1940’s it was covered by performers like Bing Crosby and The Andrew Sisters. By the 1960’s, a few vocal groups recorded versions of their own including The Crystals.

Harry
Crystals

Top: A pressing of the first recording of today’s song. Bottom: The 1963 Christmas album featuring The Crystals. (Images found online.  Original sources unknown.)

But the song’s big breakthrough came in 1970 thanks to the Rankin/Bass production team who turned it into an all star holiday animation special in 1970 starring Fred Astaire as the mailman/storyteller as well as the voice behind the theme song, Keenan Wynn as the Winter Warlock and Mickey Rooney as the voice of Santa Claus. It remains a Christmas tradition for anyone who grew up watching it.

Fred 3
Fred 2

 Two scenes from the Rankin/Bass 1970 holiday special. Top: Fred Astaire’s mailman/narrator character. Bottom: A young Kris Kringle in his early days as The Man In The Big Red Suit (with one of his pet besties at his side). (Images found online.  Original sources unknown.)

In December 1975, an up & coming rock star from New Jersey decided to perform his own take on the song in front of a college concert crowd on Long Island, NY. However, it did not hit the radio airwaves until 1981. In 1985, it was released as the B-side on the seventh single from his phenomenal album, “Born In The USA”, which turned the 10 year old recording into a holiday staple ever since.

Bruce
Bruce 1-modified

Top: Bruce Springsteen’s 1985 single. Bottom: My perpetual Christmas list. (Images found online.  Original sources unknown.)

In 2003’s incredibly delightful holiday move, “Elf”, the song helped bring power to Santa’s sleigh when Buddy’s love interest, Jovie, led a sing-a-long in Central Park to remind people that a little faith can make dreams happen.

Jovie
Buddy

Two scenes from 2003’s “Elf”. Top: Zooey Deschanel as Jovie. Bottom: Will Ferrell as Buddy and Ed Asner as Santa. (Images found online.  Original sources unknown.)

The Crystals: “Santa Claus Is Comin’ To Town” (1963, written by J. Fred Coots and Haven Gillespie).

Fred Astaire: “Santa Claus Is Comin’ To Town” (1970, written by J. Fred Coots and Haven Gillespie).

Bruce Springsteen: “Santa Claus Is Comin’ To Town” (1981 & 1985, recorded live at C.W. Post College in Brookville, NY on December 12, 1975, written by J. Fred Coots and Haven Gillespie).

What are some of your favorite Christmas songs?

Until next time, happy listening!!!

25 Days Of Christmas Music 2023: Day 17

Hello, everyone. Welcome back to the countdown.

Blog day 17

An adorable rustic Christmas tree with vintage Shiny Brite ornaments featured in Country Home Magazine.  (Image found online.  Original source unknown.)

For someone who has loved-worshipped, actually-music her whole life, I had no idea until this year that classic Christmas songs could chart in the Billboard Hot 100. I do not know why I did not realize it, as many old songs have made the charts again when their songs were introduced to a new crowd by way of a TV show or movie (like Ben E. King’s “Stand By Me” after it was featured in the 1986 movie of the same name). I always thought holiday songs had their own chart (which they do). 

The #1 song in the country right now on both charts is Brenda Lee’s “Rocking Around The Christmas Tree“, which was recorded in 1958. It got a boost when the 79 year old singer introduced a video for the song last month in honor of the 65th anniversary of its release (she is now the oldest artist to have a top-selling record).

There are five more holiday songs currently in the Top Ten, including today’s first pick which is #6. It is from the iconic Rankin-Bass TV special, “Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer”. Every song on that 1964 soundtrack was written by Johnny Marks, the same man who wrote Lee’s tune. What an incredible legacy to have such a hold on the holiday. 

The two songs from the “Rudolph” soundtrack which have been my favorites forever were both sung by the wise dapper snowman, Sam. Voiced by the Burl Ives, I wait for the first of today’s songs to consider it to be the official start of the Christmas season (along with Bruce’s take on another TV special song). The second of Sam’s songs is a bonus in a very big way. Watching the nearly 60 year old special & singing along to the same songs I sang along with as a child is both a comfort and bittersweet memory of a time when all was right in my world.

Ives and Marks 2
sam the snowman

Top:Burl Ives (L) and songwriter Johnny Marks (R) circa 1964.Bottom: Ives’ Christmas alter ego, Sam The Snowman.(Images found online.  Original sources unknown.)

Burl Ives: ”Holly Jolly Christmas” (1964, written by Johnny Marks). 

Burl Ives: ”Silver and Gold” (1964, written by Johnny Marks). 

What are some of your favorite Christmas songs?

Until next time, happy listening!!!