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When Is It Too Early To Start Playing Holiday Music?

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A mere twelve hours after Halloween's end my cable provider's Sound of the Seasons station was playing holiday music. Aren't we supposed to wait until after Thanksgiving? At least? I'm not the only blogger lamenting the premature appearance of holiday tunes.

Heck, the Halloween candy is still on sale, and we already can't escape good cheer and holiday schmaltz. Sure, nothing compares to hearing the Pogues' "Fairytale of New York," Wham!'s "Last Christmas" and Waitresses' "Christmas Wrapping" for the first time in a season -- but will they grow stale by December 22 when the holiday season really kicks into high gear? (A to Z)

I'd like to say I'm one of those people who loves holiday music, but I'm not. Far from it. I think the only album I own with a true "Christmas" song is a Ramones best-of with "Merry Christmas, I Don't Want To Fight." When pressured, I tell people my favorite holiday song is Joni Mitchell's "River," but it's only Christmas-y in theme, and pretty damn depressing to boot. Let's face it, holiday music just isn't cool. From The Guardian:

But to break through the X Factor stranglehold on the December chart, there can be no smirk, no irony, no subtext. The office Christmas party cognescenti do not wish to be challenged, sneered at or patronised. You've got to shake those sleigh bells with heartfelt conviction, wear the tinsel tiara with pride, duet with Bing Crosby in your chunkiest snow-scene sweater and love it.

Indie rock to the rescue?

This isn't the first time that Canadian indie rockers have riffed on Do They Know It's Christmas? In 2005, a band called the Unicorns were joined by Arcade Fire, Beck, Devendra Banhart, Karen O, Peaches and more to release an October single called Do They Know It's Halloween?, with all proceeds going to Unicef. And Fucked Up themselves have a tradition of celebrity singalongs – for a 2007 Christmas single they enlisted Nelly Furtado, the Black Lips and LCD Soundsystem's James Murphy to rock along to Stars On 45.

The bloggers at We *heart* Music are getting into the spirit by already publishing their Christmas Music Guide 2009. Or you have a last.fm account could do a tag search for "holiday music." Since the songs are tagged by other last.fm listeners, you can be guaranteed the playlist is as diverse as any, probably more so than your average radio station. (Where else can you hear Mariah Carey juxtaposed with Revered Horton Heat?)

See? Holiday music doesn't have to suck?

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Laurie PK 5 pts

I love holiday music -- and I realized yesterday that it really is the feeling or idea of Christmas that captures me. Not necessarily Christmas itself (stressful traveling, shopping for gifts (I hate shopping!), following the same Christmas eve and Christmas day routine with a family who doesn't like to mess with tradition).

So this year I'm enjoying Christmas all the more because I've realized it's the idea of Christmas that makes me feel all warm and fuzzy :-)  I'm letting go of how I think Christmas should be, and just enjoying the feelings it brings.

Here's one of my favorite quotes about Christmas:

"Isn't it funny that at Christmas something in you gets so lonely for - I don't know what exactly, but it's something that you don't mind so much not having at other times."  ~ Kate L. Bosher.

That's not exactly the happiest holiday quote, but I love it.

Laurie

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agnt99 5 pts

Before serving dessert after Thanksgiving dinner, I pop in my fave Christmas cd "A Charlie Brown Christmas" by Vince Guaraldi. My introduction to jazz many many years ago, it announces the season in a gentle way.

JennaHatfield 13 pts

Our show choir has been singing Christmas music since September. And I love every last moment of it. :)

@FireMom ( http://twitter.com ) from Stop, Drop and Blog ( http://stopdropandblog.com ) and The Chronicles of Munchkin Land ( http://thechroniclesofmunchkinland.com )

wifenmom 5 pts

We heard a Christmas song in the car on Halloween night! So seriously? Thankfully since then I haven't heard much. I'm fine with Christmas music, but I think by pushing the season so early, people get tired of it quicker too, like you suggested. It will lose the specialness of the holidays.

-Mary-
A Student for Life ( http://www.wifenmom.com )

midnightbliss 5 pts

here in the philippines, as early as the start of teh "ber" months, you could already hear christmas songs being played in radio stations. but usually after halloween christmas decorations are already out and christmas lights are already being lighted.

sassymonkey 6 pts moderator

The problem with the Thanksgiving rule is that it doesn't work in Canada. Our thanksgiving is before Halloween. I think that December 1 used to be the general rule here but that's died off the last few years I think.

And I've totally broken it this year. It's not my fault that the Charlie Brown Christmas CD collection was on sale. (And I've maybe had to restrain myself from putting out Christmas decorations...)

Sassymonkey ( http://sassymonkey.ca/ ) and Sassymonkey Reads ( http://sassymonkeyreads.ca/ ).