Music Notes|

Photo: Brenda Lee | By Anastasia Tsioulcas, NPR/Music News | This week’s No. 1 song on the Billboard Hot 100 is one you’ve probably heard before — over and over again. For decades. “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree”— sung by Brenda Lee, and first released 65 years ago, during the Eisenhower administration — has gone to No. 1 on the singles chart, for the first time ever.

“Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree” was written by Johnny Marks — who, as part of a long, great tradition of American Christmas songwriters, was himself actually Jewish. (Marks also wrote “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” and “A Holly Jolly Christmas.”) Lee recorded the song when she was just 13 years old, not long after she signed a contract with Decca Records.

Since its 1958 debut, this Yuletide classic has become a staple on holiday playlists. It’s a sunny, up-tempo, broadly secular song, perfect for providing cheerful ambience. But there are a few more specific reasons it’s been able to reach the top spot this year.

Back in 2018, Billboard reconfigured its chart calculation formula, giving more weight to streams (and especially to streams made on subscription or paid-tier services). That meant that catalog recordings — whether released a year earlier or decades ago — would have more of a chance to chart alongside new material, since listeners are likely to stream old favorites over and over again.

That effect has been especially notable during the holiday season, when artists have generally refrained from dropping big new releases — and when more listeners turn to a shared body of communally well-loved songs.

Those chart changes had an impact on the holiday music landscape right away. In December 2018, Mariah Carey’s “All I Want for Christmas Is You” went to No. 6 on the Hot 100 — the highest position it had ever reached on the singles chart. (When it debuted in 1994, Columbia Records didn’t bother to release the song as a commercial single in any physical format, so due to the chart rules of the time, it wasn’t eligible.)
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Read the rest of this informative “How it works” article here:
https://www.npr.org/2023/12/05/1217387261/brenda-lee-rockin-around-the-christmas-tree-billboard-number-one?

Uh… What happened to Cher’s hit “DJ, Play Me a Christmas Song” that supposedly hit #1?

Photo: Brenda Lee | Photo on her Facebook page by Gabriel McCurdy for the New York Times

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