Merry Xmas Everybody

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"Nod had written the chorus of it in 1967. In those days it was all flower power and Sgt. Pepper and Nod had written this tune. The verse was naff but then he came to the chorus and went 'Buy me a rocking chair to watch the world go by, buy me a looking glass, I'll look you in the eye' - very Sgt. Pepper. I don't use tape recorders, I just remember everything and if something's been written 10 or 15 years ago, it stays up there in my head. I never forgot that chorus, and I was in the shower in America somewhere thinking - Bob Dylan, Bob Dylan - and suddenly out came "are you hanging up the stocking on the wall" and I thought that'll go with that chorus Nod did in '67. So I rang Nod and said what about doing a Christmas song and he said alright, so I played it to him and that was it."

After an evening out drinking at a pub in Wolverhampton, [10] Holder worked through the night at his mother's house in Walsall to write the lyrics, which he completed in one draft. [11] [9]

Holder presented his lyrics to Lea, and the pair played the song to Chandler on acoustic guitars. Slade then set off on a sell-out tour. Ten weeks before the song was recorded, drummer Don Powell was injured in a car accident. His girlfriend Angela Morris was killed, and Powell remained in a coma for almost a week. After his eventual recovery, he was able to join the band to record the song.[ citation needed ] In 2009, PRS for Music announced that up to forty-two percent of the world's population could have listened to the song. [12] [13]

Recording

The song was recorded in the late summer of 1973, partway through Slade's east coast US tour, at the Record Plant in New York, [11] where John Lennon had just finished working on his album Mind Games . [7] "Merry Xmas Everybody" took five days to finish, but the band disliked the first completed version. [9] It ended up being re-recorded, with the corridor outside used to record the chorus, [11] as it provided an appropriate echo. [9]

In a 1984 interview with Record Mirror , Lea recalled of the song's recording:

"We recorded it in the Record Plant in New York which is on top of a skyscraper. We said we needed an echoey room but in those days nobody went for this big, big sound that they're all into now. These engineers thought we were mad, they're going 'no man, you know the Eagles, a very tight sound, Hotel California and all that pinging out of the speakers at you. I said what about the hallway downstairs and they went 'we can't use the hallway, there's all these businessmen walking through for the other offices'. Anyway we ran lines down to the hallway and there we were in September singing 'so here it is merry Xmas' and we were totally unknown over there and people thought we were mad."

In 2018, Jim Lea spoke of the recording of the song in a Slade Forum Q&A: "The seasonal epic, as you call it, was recorded with me full of high anxiety. Don couldn’t remember anything and no-one would rehearse it with me. They were against the idea. What you hear on the track is me playing bass, acoustic guitar, piano and harmonium as the track was built out of thin air, through lack of rehearsal. Dave conceded to play electric guitar. Poor Don looked on in horror as he drummed a single rhythm just to get it down. I knew it was good, but there was only one player in the team. Everything I tried out is on the record as Dennis Faranti (engineer) liked all the ideas I had. I dreaded hearing the mix, as we were on the road, while Chas and Dennis mixed it. I was relieved when I heard what was born from STRESS." [14]

Composition

"Merry Xmas Everybody" opens with the introduction using a B♭ triad, a 7-second melody consisting of a harmonium and bass. [15] The first verse then emerges in G major. [16] This is followed by the bridge then the chorus. This sequence is then repeated once, and followed by a solo part sung by Holder (What will your daddy do/when he sees your mamma kissin' Santa Claus ). The first sequence is then repeated, with the final chorus sung four times. On the last rendition, Holder screams out "IT'S CHRISTMAS!!!!" after the Everybody's having fun line and over the rest of the chorus; the final part decreases its tempo and fades out to a D major chord played by the harmonium.

Release

Noddy Holder in 1973, followed by Dave Hill, Slade's guitarist Noddy Holder - Slade - 1973.jpg
Noddy Holder in 1973, followed by Dave Hill, Slade's guitarist

Before its release, "Merry Xmas Everybody" received about half a million advance orders. 350,000 copies were bought upon its release.[ citation needed ] It became the third song by Slade to enter the UK Singles Chart at number one in its first eligible week on 15 December 1973, the sixth number one of their career, [8] [17] and the fastest selling single in the UK. It also marked the first time 2 consecutive number ones had entered at that position, previous number one "I Love You Love Me Love" by Gary Glitter having also entered at number one. Polydor, Slade's record label, were forced to use their French pressing plant to keep up with the demand, and the song eventually went on to sell over one million copies,[ citation needed ] becoming the Christmas number one of 1973, beating another Christmas-themed song, "I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday" by Wizzard. [18] "Merry Xmas Everybody" remained number one until mid-January, and stayed in the Top 50 for nine weeks. [19] That it remained in the charts after Christmas caused confusion for Holder, who wondered why people continued to buy it. [9]

The single's original B-side was "Don't Blame Me", which later appeared as an album track on their 1974 album Old New Borrowed and Blue . [20] In a 1979 fan club interview, Lea said: ""Don't Blame Me" was a time-filler, I think that it was created as that. When it was used as a b-side, we didn't even know it was being used, it was chosen by the offices. We were in America recording the Christmas single, there was a rush to choose what to put on the back of it, and that track happened to be used." [21]

In 1985, the song was given its first 12" vinyl release. An extended remix version of the song was created by Lea and Peter Hammond for the release. [22] In 1989, it received its first release as a CD single, which sold 15,000 copies in the UK. [23] That same year, the song was sampled by the novelty pop music act Jive Bunny and the Mastermixers for their song "Let's Party". "Let's Party" would reach No. 1 in the UK, [24] and was also a success across Europe. [25]

Promotion

No promotional video was created for the single as the band focused on extensive TV work over the Christmas period instead. They performed the song on various shows including Top of the Pops , The Les Dawson Christmas Show and Lift Off with Ayshea . [26]

The band later performed the song again on Top of the Pops in 1983 on 22 December, and on Dutch TV while promoting the 1983 single "My Oh My". [27] In 1985, Holder and Lea performed a short acoustic version on the UK show Razamatazz while promoting the single "Do You Believe in Miracles". The band mimed the song on Pebble Mill at One in 1991 while promoting the band's final single "Universe".

The song was given an animated music video which premiered on the band's YouTube channel on 9 December 2021, which was directed and animated by Matthew Robins. [28]

A visualizer for the song was released on 24 February 2022 on the band's YouTube channel. [29]

Critical reception

Upon release, Record Mirror stated: "When Slade get hold of a Christmas song, inevitably it's something different. Holder and Lea, that well known tunesmith duo, here on a gentler, more melodic, less rumbustious, guaranteed number one than usual." [30] Disc commented: "There is no doubt that this slice of festive cheer will be a huge monster hit: the main question is whether it'll go straight to number one..." [5] [31] Sounds said: "Noddy is in particularly fine voice and there's also some super-neat thumping bass." [5] [31] Melody Maker described the song as "another stomper" and "highly danceable". [32]

Legacy

"Merry Xmas Everybody" is played regularly at UK nightclubs and on TV or radio stations and in many supermarkets around Christmas. It is included on numerous Christmas-themed compilation albums and several of Slade's subsequent compilation albums. [11] [18] Despite the song's popularity it became the band's last number-one hit. [18] The song charted in every year in the early half of the 1980s, and again in 1998 and every year since 2006. [33] Peter Buckley describes the song in The Rough Guide To Rock as "arguably the best Christmas single ever". [34] This opinion was reflected in a 2007 poll carried out by MSN Music, where it was voted the UK's most popular Christmas song. [35] But even so, the song is virtually never played in the United States, having not been released as a single there in 1973. [36] In the United States this song does, however, get played on Muzak.

It can be heard playing in the background during six episodes of the British television programme Doctor Who : "The Christmas Invasion" (2005) in Mickey Smith's garage, "The Runaway Bride" (2006) at Donna's first wedding reception, "Turn Left" (2008) inside a pub and a hotel in an alternate timeline, "The End of Time" (2009) in Donna's house, "The Power of Three" (2012) in a hospital and "Last Christmas" (2014) to keep a woman distracted from the monsters in the episode.

It also can be heard at the beginning of NCIS: Los Angeles season 1 episode 10 - Brimstone.

The song has also become the last song that Mark Radcliffe and Stuart Maconie play before Christmas on their BBC Radio 6 Music show, and on a number of occasions Noddy Holder has been a guest on the show to introduce it.[ citation needed ]

Noddy Holder has referred to the song as his pension scheme, reflecting its continuing popularity and the royalties it generates. [37] In 2015 it was estimated that the song generates £500,000 of royalties per year. [38] The song has been credited with popularizing the annual race for the UK Christmas Number One Single. [39]

Cover versions

Formats and track listings

7" single

  1. "Merry Xmas Everybody" – 3:26
  2. "Don't Blame Me" – 2:40

12" single (1985 reissue)

  1. "Merry Xmas Everybody (Extended version)" – 5:17
  2. "Don't Blame Me" – 2:40

CD single (1989 reissue)

  1. "Merry Xmas Everybody" – 3:23
  2. "Don't Blame Me" – 2:40
  3. "Far Far Away" – 3:33

CD single (1993 German reissue)

  1. "Merry Xmas Everybody" – 3:23
  2. "My Friend Stan" - 2:38
  3. "Cum On Feel the Noize" – 4:18

CD single (Slade vs. Flush '98 remix)

  1. "Merry Xmas Everybody '98 Remix (Flush Edit)" – 3:44
  2. "Merry Xmas Everybody (Original version)" – 3:26
  3. "Cum On Feel the Noize" – 4:23

CD single (2006 reissue)

  1. "Merry Xmas Everybody" – 3:26
  2. "Cum On Feel the Noize" – 4:23

Personnel

Slade

Additional personnel

Charts

Original release

"Merry Xmas Everybody"
Slade - Merry Xmas Everybody.jpg
Side A of the original UK single
Single by Slade
B-side "Don't Blame Me"
Released7 November 1973 [1]
RecordedJuly 1973
Genre Christmas, glam rock
Length3:44
Label Polydor
Songwriter(s) Noddy Holder, Jim Lea
Producer(s) Chas Chandler
Slade singles chronology
"My Friend Stan"
(1973)
"Merry Xmas Everybody"
(1973)
"Everyday"
(1974)
Alternative covers
Merry Xmas Everybody (Slade single - cover art).jpg
French cover
Chart (1973–74)Peak
position
Australia (Kent Music Report) [49] 55
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders) [50] 3
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Wallonia) [51] 3
Finland (Suomen virallinen lista) [52] 19
Ireland (IRMA) [53] 1
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40) [54] 3
Netherlands (Single Top 100) [55] 3
Norway (VG-lista) [56] 4
UK Singles (OCC) [57] 1
West Germany (Official German Charts) [58] 4

Re-entries and reissues

Chart (1980)Peak
position
UK Singles Chart [2] 70
Chart (1981)Peak
position
UK Singles Chart [2] 32
Chart (1982)Peak
position
UK Singles Chart [2] 67
Chart (1983)Peak
position
UK Singles Chart [2] 20
Chart (1984)Peak
position
Irish Singles Chart [59] 18
UK Singles Chart [2] 47
Chart (1985)Peak
position
UK Singles Chart [2] 48
Chart (1986)Peak
position
UK Singles Chart [2] 71
Chart (1989)Peak
position
UK Singles Chart [2] 99
Chart (1990)Peak
position
UK Singles Chart [2] 93
Chart (1991)Peak
position
Dutch Singles Chart [60] 73
Chart (1998)Peak
position
UK Singles Chart [2] 30
Chart (2006)Peak
position
European Hot 100 Singles Chart [61] 65
UK Singles Chart [2] 21
Chart (2007)Peak
position
UK Singles Chart [2] 20
Chart (2008)Peak
position
UK Singles Chart [2] 32
Chart (2009)Peak
position
German Singles Chart [62] 80
UK Singles Chart [2] 41
Chart (2010)Peak
position
UK Singles Chart [2] 50
Chart (2011)Peak
position
UK Singles Chart [2] 33
Chart (2012)Peak
position
UK Singles Chart [2] 35
Chart (2013)Peak
position
UK Singles Chart [2] 49
Chart (2014)Peak
position
UK Singles Chart [2] 55
Chart (2015)Peak
position
Poland (Polish Airplay Top 100) [63] 61
UK Singles Chart [2] 55
Chart (2016)Peak
position
Poland (Polish Airplay Top 100) [64] 53
UK Singles Chart [2] 30
Chart (2017)Peak
position
Irish Singles Chart [59] 65
Poland (Polish Airplay Top 100) [65] 51
Slovenia (SloTop50) [66] 30
UK Singles Chart [2] 16
Chart (2018)Peak
position
Poland (Polish Airplay Top 100) [67] 82
UK Singles Chart [2] 17
Chart (2019)Peak
position
Poland (Polish Airplay Top 100) [68] 36
UK Singles Chart [2] 19
Chart (2020)Peak
position
Poland (Polish Airplay Top 100) [69] 50
UK Singles Chart [2] 17
Chart (2021)Peak
position
Poland (Polish Airplay Top 100) [70] 66
UK Singles Chart [2] 21
Chart (2022)Peak
position
Poland (Polish Airplay Top 100) [71] 44
UK Singles Chart [2] 26
Chart (2023–2024)Peak
position
Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40) [72] 73
Poland (Polish Airplay Top 100) [73] 42
Sweden Heatseeker (Sverigetopplistan) [74] 15
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade) [75] 99
UK Singles Chart [2] 32

Certifications and sales

RegionCertification Certified units/sales
Denmark (IFPI Danmark) [76] Platinum90,000
United Kingdom (BPI) [77]
Physical release
Platinum1,000,000^
United Kingdom (BPI) [78]
Digital release
3× Platinum1,800,000

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

See also

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