Every December (or more often, late November) radio listeners are bombarded with themes of merriment, prosperity, and togetherness, written about in traditional holiday music. It’s uplifting for the easily uplifted, but a joyless purgatory for those who dread the upcoming holiday season, a frostbitten limbo we’re forced to endure until the Christmas tree has dried up. Here’s a list of musicians who feel the same way.
10. Barenaked Ladies feat. Michael Buble: Elf’s Lament
Sung from the point of view of overworked and under-appreciated elves, this song lulls the listener in with a jaunty rhythm and some brightly harmonized lyrics about vague Christmas sentiments. But upon repeated listens, it becomes much too easy to see the parallels between our sprightly (albeit dissatisfied) protagonists and the working conditions of real-world laborers who painstakingly toil over our Christmas gifts, many of which will be tossed in a closet to collect dust until next winter. Even Michael Buble, a cheerful crooner and all-around nice guy, can’t take the sting out of lyrics like “a full indentured servitude can reflect on one’s attitude.” So when picking out which toy to give your bratty child this year, please “consider the price to an elf.”
9. Fall Out Boy: Yule Shoot Your Eye Out
8. Fountains of Wayne: The Man in the Santa Suit
It’s no doubt that kids love going to the mall to sit on Santa’s lap, but it clearly takes an extraordinarily patient and dedicated man to put up with all the unprovoked tantrums, putrid smells, and occasional spit-ups that those children can bring. With that in mind, Fountains of Wayne ask us to empathize with the guys who have to look “jolly and hairy” all year round just to don the red suit in December, but also realize that it’s a job like any other and these guys are mostly “doing it just for the loot.”
7. Billy Idol: Yellin’ at the Xmas Tree
If anyone knows the pitfalls of an all-night drunken spree, it’s probably Billy Idol. But here Idol lays off the bottle long enough to sing about his father’s binging the night before Christmas. He laments how his dad “had too much Jack” to hear the carolers singing, or even to notice that his wife went to bed with a bearded man who recently dropped down their chimney. As the title implies, he’s more concerned with screaming at a decorative pine tree.
6. Fitz & the Tantrums: Santa Stole My Lady
5. Ben Folds: Bizarre Christmas Incident
Expletives abound in this funky tune about St. Nick getting stuck in an unwitting homeowner’s chimney and burning to death. Not something you’re likely to hear your neighbors caroling on your front door, unless you live in a very strange and terrifying neighborhood. The possibility of a lawsuit seems of greater concern to Folds than the fact that Santa Claus has just been roasted over an open fire: a true testament to how little he cares for this holiday.
4. Blink-182: I Won’t Be Coming Home for Christmas
Like most Blink-182 songs, this one is a bouncy, pseudo-punk jam, chocked full of insults and sophomoric euphemisms. The difference is that, this time, it has some bells ringing in the background. Still, it’s hard not to admire their honesty, particularly in the chorus:
“It’s Christmas time again
It’s time to be nice to the people you can’t stand all year
I’m growing tired of all this Christmas cheer
You people scare me
Please stay away from my home”
3. The Killers: Don’t Shoot Me Santa
Though there’s nothing about the instrumentation that would allude to this being a Christmas song (in fact, it wouldn’t sound out of place on their Sam’s Town album,) it makes sense that these Vegas boys would craft a carol that’s free of the bells and whistles of typical holiday standards. Besides, it would be hard to imagine sleigh bells backing the desperate pleas of a child begging for mercy from a man who’s supposed to deliver joy, not murder, on December 25th. The highlight of this weird tune? Brandon Flowers’ growling while he channels a menacing Santa Claus hellbent on “killing just for fun.”
2. John Denver: Please Daddy (Don’t Get Drunk This Christmas)
1. Sufjan Stevens: Did I Make You Cry on Christmas Day? (Well, You Deserved It)
King of the quirky Christmas song, Sufjan Stevens has entire albums that could’ve been included in this list, but this track earns a special place for its somber depiction of a breakup during what’s supposed to be the most joyful holiday of the year. Stevens paints a picture so depressingly grim and accurate that it’s hard not to reflect on your own past relationships, and wonder how you’d deal if you’d endured a traumatic split on Christmas Day.
Written By Jacob Trowbridge
11 Comments
hehe bookmaked. Keeping this for future reference appreciated heap
good songs fralalala 🙂
There’s also Type O Negative’s ‘Red Water (Christmas Mourning)’ – One of my personal faves.
I’m not sure if this is a cynical Christmas song or just kinda sad, but here you go, “Lonely This Christmas” : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NJ6kJ7GWtv0
Where is “Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer.”? Now, that’s cynical.
Check out the Kevin Bloody Wilson song “Santa Claus You C**t”. It’s hilarious.
i went through the list a couple of times, and it appears that you forgot Corey Taylor’s song “X-M@$”
Wait no I was wrong….
Happy Xmas (war is over) – John Lennon
The Fairytale of New York – The Progues
The Night Santa Went Crazy – Weird Al
The Pogues, dude. But otherwise I do agree. 🙂
The Kinks — Father Christmas…that is all.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXCEdrnaFlY
I Belive in Father Christmas by Greg Lake should have been at the top of this list
@ Graham. EXACTLY. I am a huge EL&P fan. I have seen them 3 times and were fantastic. But they are the Kings of pretention. “I Believe In Father Christmas” is actually a classical piece of music by the Russian Composer Sergei Prokofiev (1891-1953) entitled “Lt. Kije Suite”. I bet its safe to say that 20-25% of EL&P’s music is lifted from composers of Classical Music. Great Post you have made…….