Sunday, December 7, 2025

I’ll Be Home for Christmas for Pearl Harbor Day—Murfin Winter Holidays Music Festival 2025-26


                     The quintessential World War II Holiday separation songs.  There were enough of those for a whole sub-category of holiday music.

Eighty-five years ago, today the Japanese launched their devastating surprise attack on Pearl Harbor thrusting the United States into a bloody worldwide conflagration and forever altering the lives and destinies of millions.  It also cast a somber pall over Christmas festivities getting underway stateside just as the last vestiges of the Great Depression were being shaken off and folks had money to spend for a change. 


The USS Arizona going down after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1949.

With a long war ahead, families and sweethearts would be wrenched by separation and fearPeople turned to music for comfort, especially at Christmas time.  There were many war-time Christmas songs written and recordedalmost every Big Band with a singer had at least one in their repertoire.  They filled the holiday radio shows and were transcribed to be played for the troops around the world.   Many of the songs were forgettable, but some have become timeless classics. 


A compilation album of World War II songs, especially the ones of longing and separation.

For my fatherFirst Sargent W. M. Murfin posted to a forward American field hospital attached to the British and Anzac forces under Field Marshall Montgomery in North Africa in 1942, the song that brightened a cold night in the desert was White Christmas, the Irving Berlin song that made its debut in Holiday Inn with Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire.  Its wistful note of nostalgia plucked many hearts and cemented its place as the most beloved secular American Christmas song. 

Later in the war, millions thought that Judy Garland was singing for them as well as for Margaret OBrien when she crooned the melancholy Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas. 


Bing Crosby on a USO tour in Europe. 

In 1943 Bing Crosby scored again with a song aimed directly at lonely servicemen far from home and their families.  Ill be Home For Christmas by lyricist Kim Gannon and composer Walter Kent was released by Decca Records and became a top ten hit and Crosby’s fifth Gold Record.  Buck Ram was later also given credit after a lawsuit because he had written a poem with the same name and similar sentiments. 

Within a month of release, the song charted for 11 weeks, with a peak at #3. The next year, it reached #16.   It soon became a perennial on Christmas radio and after Billboard established a separate seasonal chart for air play it was frequently near the top.  The song was also featured on Crosby’s famous 1945 Christmas 78 rpm album and its LP release in 1949 which has itself been re-released and re-mastered several more times. 

The song has been covered by Perry ComoFrank SinatraElvis PresleyJohnny MathisConnie FrancisThe CarpentersAnita BakerKelly ClarksonMichael BubléPentatonix, and Demi Lovato among many others. 

But Der Bingle did it best. 

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