American
kids have their own category of secular
Christmas songs, most centering on or around that Jolly
Old Elf a/k/a Santa Clause, St. Nick, Kris
Kringle, etc. You have to forgive the greedy
little buggers for not focusing
on the birth of a baby
and the whole savior
and Messiah
thing. A fat
guy with a bag full of toys and flying
reindeer trump all the Holy stuff. The songs
include ditties like Jolly
Old St. Nicholas, Santa Claus is Coming to
Town, and Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer. And the
most successful singer of such songs was cowboy
crooner Gene Autry who became the children’s Bing
Crosby in the post-World War II era and
1950s.
Autry
returned to Hollywood
from service
as an Army
Air Corps C-47 pilot who flew
supplies over the hump
from India to China
and Burma
to find himself eclipsed
as the singing
cowboy king at Republic Pictures by the younger
and handsomer Roy
Rogers. In 1947 Autry left Republic for Columbia Pictures, which offered him his own production unit. He chose a new sidekick, Pat Buttram, recently returned from his World War II service.
Buttram would co-star with him in more than 40 films and in more than 100
episodes of Autry’s television
show.
But
his real bread and
butter was Melody Ranch, his weekly
show on CBS Radio and his recording
career. In 1946 inspired by the Hollywood Santa Clause Parade, Autry Here Comes Santa Claus which charted at #5 in 1947, #4 the next year, and #8 in ’49. It has continued to place in the annual Christmas charts regularly in the decades since and is a staple of holiday
radio station playlists.
In
1949 Autry followed up with the even more successful Rudolph the Red Nosed
Reindeer and Frosty
The Snowman in 1950.
He filled out the Christmas LPs he put out in the 50’s and which have been re-issued since with both traditional
carols and popular songs.
In 1960 Autry was Grand Marshal of the Hollywood Christmas Parade which was broadcast nationally on ABC TV,
Autry,
a pious Christian tried to sneak in, a bit clumsily, a religious sentiment in the third
verse and final refrain.
Here comes Santa Claus, here
comes Santa Claus right down Santa Claus Lane
He'll come around when
chimes ring out that it’s Christmastime again
Peace on earth will come to
all if we just follow the light
So let’s give thanks to the
Lord above, ‘cause Santa Claus comes tonight.
Other artists to record the song include Doris Day (1949), Bing
Crosby and the Andrews Sisters (1949), Elvis
Presley (1957), the Ray Conniff Singers (1959), Keely
Smith (1960), David Seville and His Chipmunks (1961), Bob
B. Soxx &
the Blue Jeans (1963), Hank Thompson (1964), in excerpt by The
Beach Boys as part of their song Child of Winter (1974), Willie
Nelson (1979), Glen Campbell (1997), Billy
Idol (2006), Bob
Dylan (2009), Mariah Carey (2010), Chicago (2011), the Glee
cast (2013), Anna
Kendrick (2015), and Pentatonix (2018). The song was also featured prominently in the popular 1989 Christmas movie National Lampoon’s
Christmas Vacation during the
climax towards the end of the film.
That’s a song with real staying power.
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