The Little Drummer Boy

Katherine Davis, an American composer of over 600 songs, is remembered today for one iconic song: “The Little Drummer Boy“, which she penned in 1941 and was originally titled “Carol of the Drum”.

Claire Fontijn of Wellesley College, commenting on the inspiration for the song, states that Davis, an alumna of the college, “when she was trying to take a nap, she was obsessed with this song that came into her head and it was supposed to have been inspired by a French song, ‘Patapan,’” explained Fontijn. “And then ‘patapan’ translated in her mind to ‘pa-rum-pum-pum,’ and it took on a rhythm” that became the beat of the song.

The Trapp Family Singers, famous from the 1959 Rodgers and Hammerstein musical “The Sound of Music“, brought the song to the American public when they recorded it in 1951 for Decca Records.

Jack Halloran, a composer and choral director for singers such as Dean Martin and Frank Sinatra, recorded the song with a different arrangement for the album “Christmas is A-Comin’” on Dot Records in 1957. The song was not released as a single, though. In 1958, Harry Simeone recorded an almost identical version of Halloran’s arrangement for Decca Records. The song, as recorded by Decca Records, credits Davis, along with arrangers Henry Onorati and Harry Simeone. Jack Halloran is not given credit for the Decca Record.

Source: Wellesley Faculty, Wellesley College, 2017. The Little Drummer Boy by Harry Simeone, 1977. Graphic: The Little Drummer Boy by Joan Jett on the 1981 I Love Rock’n Roll album, Boardwalk label.

Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire

On a sweltering summer day in 1945 in Los Angeles, Bob Wells was sitting at his piano, trying to coax himself into a cooler state of mind by writing some wintry lines in his notebook:

Chestnuts roasting on an open fire

Jack Frost nipping at your nose

Yuletide carols being sung by a choir

And folks dressed up like Eskimos

His songwriting partner, Mel Tormé, stopped by shortly after he had written those lines, and in less than an hour, they finished the lyrics to what would become “The Christmas Song” (also known as “Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire“).

Nat King Cole fell in love with the song when Tormé played it for him shortly after they had finished it. However, it took until 1946 before he could get into a studio to record it. Cole recut the song again in 1953 and 1960, with the last version becoming today’s definitive standard.

On most ranked lists of Christmas songs, “The Christmas Song” usually comes in at number 2, just behind “White Christmas“.

Source: The Christmas Song by Lydia Hutchinson, Performing Songwriter, 2016. Graphic: The Christmas Song by Nat King Cole, Capital Records and YouTube, 2010.

White Christmas

Berlin believed that “White Christmas” was not only the best song he ever composed but quite simply the best song ever.

Although accounts differ, most agree that he wrote the song between 1938 and 1940. It was eventually included in the 1942 movie Holiday Inn, earning the Academy Award for Best Original Song in 1943. Bing Crosby debuted the song on Christmas Day 1941, a mere 18 days after the Pearl Harbor attack.

White Christmas” evokes a melancholy nostalgia for many listeners, bringing back cherished memories of simpler times. Tina Benitez-Ives of American Songwriter writes that the lyrics may have been centered around the death of Berlin’s son, who died on Christmas Day in 1928 at only three weeks old. Every year after the death of his son, Berlin, who was Jewish, and his wife would visit his grave on Christmas, which may have led him to write the more somber holiday song.

Source: American Songwriter. Graphic: White Christmas by Bing Crosby and the London Symphony Orchestra, youtube. White Christmas by Bing Crosby, Decca Records.

A Bygone Era

Norman Rockwell’s Christmas Book

By Molly Rockwell

Published by Harry N. Abrams

Copyright: © 1977

A beautiful collection of Norman Rockwell’s Christmas and winter scenes interspersed with Christmas stories, music, and more that you have experienced and loved since you were a little, wide-eyed tyke waiting for permission to tear into your presents.

The book not only contains some great Rockwell snapshots of Christmas but timeless stories of Christmas cheer, that if you haven’t read you should, just for the heart-warming smiles they will bring to your fuddy duddy lips and cheeks. O’Henry’s Gift of the Magi is here along with Moore’s Night Before Christmas, Dicken’s Christmas goblin short story, Virginia’s, “Is there a Santa Claus?” letter, and the newspaper’s response, all to remind and reinforce why Christmas is the world’s favorite holiday.

This book was first published in 1977, which is the one I have, with various reprintings and content expansions through the years, the most recent edition coming out in 2009. The new edition contains additional Rockwell paintings along with poster size prints that are ready for framing. Merry Christmas.