suburbannature Posted January 4, 2023 Posted January 4, 2023 Popular culture is not going to allow Xmas songs to peak in October and especially not with longevity. Society is fickle and moves in waves. Don’t be silly. We’ve just had several difficult years and people are leaning into the comfort of festivity and the holiday season earlier. People have been complaining about stores playing Xmas music after Halloween/Thanksgiving since I was a kid.
Ivan_brit Posted January 4, 2023 Posted January 4, 2023 Hold Me Closer coming for 20 weeks at Hot 100
MusicLoverDude Posted January 4, 2023 Posted January 4, 2023 1 hour ago, Ivan_brit said: Hold Me Closer coming for 20 weeks at Hot 100 It will be caught between years though if it doesn't rebound after Xmas
Sinister Posted January 4, 2023 Posted January 4, 2023 2 hours ago, pride4jc1222 said: Okay, but what happens when we start having Christmas music in October, or even September? Are we supposed to sit around and accept 3–4 months of the year being dead time? That won’t happen. November is really as far as it’ll extend since ppl switch over after Halloween
fridayteenage Posted January 4, 2023 Posted January 4, 2023 yeah it used to start black friday, but now some ppl are all over it when november starts
Capruni Posted January 4, 2023 Posted January 4, 2023 Kill Bill will be promoted to radios, now It could reach #1 in the next tracking week!
ClashAndBurn Posted January 4, 2023 Posted January 4, 2023 3 hours ago, pride4jc1222 said: Okay, but what happens when we start having Christmas music in October, or even September? Are we supposed to sit around and accept 3–4 months of the year being dead time? Bad faith argument, considering Christmas music doesn’t start getting any airplay until after Halloween.
Mr. Duff Posted January 5, 2023 Posted January 5, 2023 On 1/3/2023 at 6:11 PM, MusicLoverDude said: Dude, Mr. Duff is actually a sane member compared to 90% of the catty ******* here. He is not a Brenda stan OR a Mariah stan. He stans Hilary and Demi as far as I know and he's been on this site for 17 years. There are plenty of other ATRL members to go after, Mr. Duff isn't one of them. I appreciate you MLD!!! Genuinely curious because I didn’t feel like I attacked or tried to be funny with my comment. On 1/3/2023 at 6:28 PM, stevyy said: It's funny bc it is what a certain base is saying every year, but they mean it in a negative way for Mariah. Okay but not everyone is part of a certain base and not everyone is out to criticise and stir negativity. I was genuinely saying Brenda may get #1 next year because of how close it is and she also deserves it. Love Mariah too so all’s good if she blocks Brenda. I’ll give you a hug so we start fresh. On 1/3/2023 at 7:06 PM, PoisonPill said: We are all chart-watchers. It is exciting to see a close race for #1. People often root for the underdog. Not everything is a personal attack on your favorite entertainer. Amen! On 1/3/2023 at 8:33 PM, Green said: This!!! I stan Mariah and I would like Brenda to get at least 1 week at #1 with her Christmas classic too or Last Christmas which got a new peak this year But some stans are so annoying and insecure and see every post as an attack to Mariah Yes Brenda deserves it too! I really hope she can snatch at least a week next Christmas.
pride4jc1222 Posted January 6, 2023 Posted January 6, 2023 Here Are the Top-Gaining Songs of the 2022 Holiday Season A look at the carols that made the 10 biggest increases in on-demand streaming over the 2022 holidays as compared to 2021. BY GARY TRUST TThe presents have been opened and wallets closed, as the 2022 holidays have concluded. But which holiday songs made the biggest gains over the latest holiday season? Here’s a look at the seasonal songs that logged the 10 top increases in on-demand audio and video streaming over the 2022 holidays as compared to 2021, according to Luminate, among the 50 most-streamed songs, on-demand, this holiday season. Overall, streaming of holiday songs surged 12.1% over the latest holidays (Nov. 18-Dec. 29, 2022, correlating to the tracking period of Billboard‘s Holiday 100 songs chart dated from Dec. 3 through Jan. 7), as compared to the corresponding period the year before (Nov. 19-Dec. 30, 2021), per the top 500 holiday titles in each of the last two holiday seasons. (For this research, UGC [user-generated content] was included, although it does not contribute to Billboard‘s charts.) Below is a recap of the 10 top-gaining seasonal songs year-over-year during the latest holidays — and their newest chart highlights. The Top-Gaining Songs of the 2022 Holiday Season “Here Comes Santa Claus,” Gene Autry 70.5 million on-demand audio and video U.S. streams Nov. 18-Dec. 29, 2022, up 53.5% from Nov. 19-Dec. 30, 2021 The song galloped to a No. 25 high on the Billboard Hot 100 dated Dec. 31, besting its prior No. 28 peak reached three years earlier. Originally released in 1947, it hit the top 10 on Billboard pop and country charts annually through the end of the ’40s. “Blue Christmas,” Elvis Presley 77.2 million, up 48.8% The King’s festive favorite logs a new No. 24 best on the Jan. 7 Hot 100. Up from No. 27, it marks his first appearance in the top 25 in exactly 44 years, since “My Way” held at its No. 22 peak on the Jan. 7, 1978, survey. “Deck the Halls,” Nat King Cole 86.4 million, up 41.1% The track made a jolly jaunt to a new No. 16 high on the Dec. 31 Hot 100. As previously reported, Cole achieves his first top 10 since 1963 with “The Christmas Song (Merry Christmas to You),” which gained by 5% to 95.4 million on-demand streams this holiday season vs. the same period the year before. “This Christmas,” Donny Hathaway 53.4 million, up 39.1% The song rises to a new No. 37 highpoint on the Jan. 7 Hot 100. It’s his top-ranking entry since “The Closer I Get to You” – one of his six charted duets with Roberta Flack – a No. 2 hit in 1978. “Christmas Eve/Sarajevo 12/24,” Trans-Siberian Orchestra 36 million, up 37.8% The instrumental rock reimagination of “God Rest Ye, Merry Gentlemen” and “Carol of the Bells” reached No. 35 on the Holiday 100 in December, its best rank on the chart in over two years. “Merry Christmas,” Ed Sheeran & Elton John 41.4 million, up 37.4% The cheery song by the British superstars fared far better in its second year. On the Hot 100, it climbed to No. 42, after it hit No. 55 in its first year of release. If its momentum continues, it could swell John’s total of top 40 hits beyond his current sum of 59, while Sheeran boasts 23 top 40 entries. “Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!,” Dean Martin 60.5 million, up 31.7% After first making notable inroads in streaming in the mid-2010s, the classic has hit the top 20 on the Streaming Songs chart each holiday season since 2018, reaching a No. 5 best in December 2020. “Jingle Bells,” Frank Sinatra 81.3 million, up 31.3% The recording ascends to No. 20 on the Jan. 7-dated Hot 100, marking a milestone for the late legend: he ranks in the top 20 for the first time since June 3, 1967, when “Somethin’ Stupid,” with daughter Nancy, placed at No. 16 following four weeks at No. 1. “Do They Know It’s Christmas,” Band Aid 40.1 million, up 29.7% The all-star anthem hit No. 34 on the Dec. 3 Holiday 100, its best rank since 2018. Helping its profile, LadBaby’s update, “Food Aid” (also a charity single) topped the Dec. 31 Official UK Singles chart. With the coronation, the husband-and-wife duo of Mark and Roxanne Hoyle became the first act with five Christmas UK No. 1s, surpassing The Beatles’ four in 1963-65 and 1967. “All I Want for Christmas Is You,” Mariah Carey 262.3 million, up 29.6% Rounding out the top 10-gaining holiday hits over the most recent Yuletide season, Carey’s 1994 modern classic made more Hot 100 history, upping its total to 12 weeks at No. 1, including four in a row, its most time on top in any holiday period. Its 262.3 million on-demand streams over the 2022 holidays led all songs, followed by runner-up Brenda Lee’s “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree” (202.8 million). In highlights just outside the seasonal songs with the 10 biggest increases over the latest holidays, Wham!’s “Last Christmas” gained by 29.1% to 150.7 million on-demand streams, as it hits a new No. 4 best on the Jan. 7 Hot 100; Sia’s “Snowman,” from 2017, surged by 26% to 39.7 million streams; and Ariana Grande’s “Santa Tell Me,” from 2014, jumped by 18.9% to 115.3 million streams. Meanwhile, three songs released this holiday season made the top 50 in 2022 holiday on-demand streams, with all three Amazon Original exclusives and covers of classics: Lizzo’s “Someday at Christmas” (44.4 million), Lauren Spencer-Smith’s “Last Christmas” (37.6 million) and Kane Brown’s “Blue Christmas” (36.8 million).
brianc33710 Posted January 6, 2023 Posted January 6, 2023 On 1/4/2023 at 8:50 AM, Capruni said: Wow, it was a tight race… Maybe next year she could snatch at least one week at #1 So would Lee be #1 without Careys Christmas special? 4 points is pretty dang close.
Ger Posted January 6, 2023 Posted January 6, 2023 5 hours ago, pride4jc1222 said: “Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!,” Dean Martin 60.5 million, up 31.7% After first making notable inroads in streaming in the mid-2010s, the classic has hit the top 20 on the Streaming Songs chart each holiday season since 2018, reaching a No. 5 best in December 2020.
pride4jc1222 Posted January 7, 2023 Posted January 7, 2023 16 hours ago, brianc33710 said: So would Lee be #1 without Careys Christmas special? 4 points is pretty dang close. Not really, the streaming gap actually widened this year. AIWFCIY had 262.3 million on-demand streams, while RATCT had 202.8 million. The thing that jumps out at me the most is the jump Merry Christmas made from Year 1 to Year 2. Usually, Christmas songs dip in Year 2 (just look at UTT and STM, which took several years to return to the chart). I wouldn't be surprised if in 10 years time Merry Christmas overtakes UTT, STM, and whatever Buble song is the highest as the 21st century Christmas standard. STM sounds to me like something that has a shelf life and is going to fade after some time.
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