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christmas songs on the hot 100 |
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edtop40 ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 29 October 2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 2 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Posted: 25 December 2021 at 1:23pm |
anyone know how billboard calculates its christmas songs on
the hot 100....for example, if someone else does "last christmas' say, carrie underwood, does that count as a unique play by carrie underwood or does it get counted as by wham!?....just wondering.. |
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edtop40
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Paul Haney ![]() Music Fan ![]() ![]() Joined: 01 April 2005 Status: Offline Points: 31 |
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Versions of the same songs by different artists are counted separately. |
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PopArchivist ![]() Music Fan ![]() ![]() Joined: 30 June 2018 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 20 |
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These days Ed, they just chart. Usually for five weeks from the first week of December to the first week of January and whatever the main artist is. So if it's Mariah Carey it would be All I Want For Christmas Is You. If there is a remake under another artist, it would be under their name. Thats why I end my year at the end of November. While I understand the Hot 100 should reflect Christmas songs, I agree with Brian W that actual charted songs should not miss the top 10 or #1 because of Billboard's policy to let Xmas hits chart for 5 weeks. |
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Favorite two expressions to live by on this board: "You can't download vinyl" and "Not everything is available on CD."
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Hykker ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 30 October 2007 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 12 |
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Not that anyone asked me, but to me allowing non-current-release Christmas songs to chart is BS. Makes a mess of the year-end rankings when a 40 year old song could get enough plays in one month to "count" as one of the top hits of the year. |
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Santi Paradoa ![]() Music Fan ![]() ![]() Joined: 17 February 2009 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 20 |
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FYI, currently there are two Christmas songs missing
entries in the online database. The CD they appear on is already listed, but these two songs are not listed under it. The soundtrack CD Friday After Next (Hollywood 62378) includes both Donny Hathaway's "This Christmas" and Eartha Kitt's "Santa Baby" which have both recently charted decades after they were first released. |
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Santi Paradoa
Miami, Florida |
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EdisonLite ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 18 October 2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 58 |
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I agree! According to Billboard, one of the top 100 artists of the year (in '22 or '21) was Andy Williams! By no metrics should he have been considered one of the top 100 artists of the year (no offense to Andy Williams, and I actually like some of his stuff). But unless someone specifically looked at Billboard's weekly charts and saw "It's the Most Wonderful Time of the Year" in Billboard's top 10 portion of the Hot 100, most people would ask, "Did Andy Williams have a comeback I missed???" Also, this past season, besides Christmas songs, there were weeks when Taylor Swift and other artists released albums that had 15-17 songs chart. As a result, Jax's "Victoria's Secret" had a #35 peak on the Hot 100, right before about 6 weeks of all the "craziness" happening. Yet, it peaked at #8 on the all-genre radio charts, about that high on Pop Radio / Mainstream chart, #1 or #2 Hot AC, #15 AC - so I feel it got slighted for its hot 100 peak of #35. If it weren't for the Christmas songs, and weekly debuts of album cuts by superstar acts, I believe this would have gotten much higher. And then having reached higher #s (like, say, top 20), it could have even led to more radio stations playing it more (from seeing how well it was doing on the Hot 100) and it becoming an even bigger hit. Edited by EdisonLite |
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EdisonLite ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 18 October 2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 58 |
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Speaking of Christmas songs on Billboard's Hot 100, a friend and I recently
noted that there was only about 1 Top 40-charting Christmas song in the '70s (Please Come Home for Christmas by the Eagles) and 1 Top40-charting Christmas song in the '80s (Band-Aid's Do They Know It's Christmas). I might be forgetting a few. But basically - Christmas songs weren't allowed to chart in those 2 decades, so how did these 2 manage to slip through the rules? I guess the Band-Aid one could be argued that it was a charity single. But the Eagles.. well, they were superstars by then but that's not a reason to make an exception for that one 45. Surely, Lennon's "Happy Xmas" would have charted high, and Elton's "Step Into Christmas" would have made top 40 or 100. Has anyone read why these 2 songs slipped through the cracks, so to speak? |
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davidlg1971 ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 30 August 2020 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 0 |
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Two 70s/80s Christmas songs that always spring to mind for me are Paul McCartney's 'Wonderful Christmastime', which hit #28 on the Top 40 in 1979, and Wham! with 'Last Christmas', which hit #4 in 1984/5. It was also #2 for like 10+ weeks straight in the UK, behind 'Do They Know It's Christmas?'. Edited by davidlg1971 |
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EdisonLite ![]() Music Fan ![]() Joined: 18 October 2004 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 58 |
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Yes, but those are not US peaks in 1979 or 1984.
Those 2 songs didn't chart in Billboard until the past few years. |
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Paul Haney ![]() Music Fan ![]() ![]() Joined: 01 April 2005 Status: Offline Points: 31 |
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From 1963 thru 1973, and from 1983 thru 1985, Billboard published a separate Christmas Singles chart and did not
chart Christmas singles on the Hot 100. Yes, the Band Aid song was considered an exception. Remember, this was an era before the all Christmas music stations started popping up. Starting around Thanksgiving, Top 40 stations would slowly start sprinkling in some Christmas music, gradually increasing the frequency as Christmas got closer. It's my guess that Billboard didn't like the fact that a few songs (such as White Christmas) would come back every year for a few weeks on the Hot 100, thus the change in policy in 1963. There were a smattering of Christmas singles to make the Hot 100 from 1974-82, with the Eagles song being the most popular, by far. Frankly, I'd like to see Billboard allow only brand new Christmas songs to make the Hot 100 and for the older ones to be accounted for on the Holiday 100 chart only. After all, I think most people consider them to be "re-currents" and no one would confuse Andy Williams, Perry Como and the like to be "hot" artists. |
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