Why Mariah Carey’s ‘All I Want for Christmas is You’ became so popular – and stayed that way | CityNews Calgary
If something about Mariah Carey’s “All I Want for Christmas is You” annoys you, greatest to keep away from buying malls now. Or the radio. Maybe music altogether, for that matter.
Her 1994 carol dominates vacation music like nothing else.
The Christmas colossus has reached No. 1 on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart the previous 4 years in a row — measuring the preferred songs every week by airplay, gross sales and streaming, not simply the holiday-themed — and it’s affordable to imagine 2023 might be no totally different. One professional predicts it’s going to quickly exceed $100 million in earnings. Even its ringtone has bought thousands and thousands.
“That song is just embedded in history now,” says David Foster, the 16-time Grammy-winning composer and producer. “It’s embedded in Christmas. When you think of Christmas right now, you think of that song.”
Yet the story behind “All I Want for Christmas is You” just isn’t all holly and mistletoe.
The music’s co-authors, Carey and Walter Afanasieff, are in a mystifying feud. The authors of a unique music with the identical title have sued searching for $20 million in damages. While Carey calls herself the Queen of Christmas, her bid to trademark that title failed.
Every yr on Nov. 1, the music’s hibernation ends when Carey posts on social media that “it’s time” to play it once more. This yr’s message depicted her being free of a block of ice to make the declaration.
In each music and lyrics, the music was completely engineered for fulfillment, says Joe Bennett, musicologist and professor on the Berklee College of Music. And it got here from an artist who was on the high of her sport on the time.
“All I Want for Christmas is You” works as a love and vacation music. Carey units it up: She doesn’t care about all the vacation trappings, she has one factor — one particular person — on her thoughts. She sprinkles in particular vacation references, from Santa Claus to mistletoe.
The devices and brisk association recall Phil Spector’s 1965 album, “A Christmas Gift for You,” itself a vacation traditional. To high it off, a part of the melody slyly references “White Christmas,” Bennett says.
“That was my goal, to do something timeless,” Carey defined in a current “Good Morning America” interview.
Billboard has produced lists of high seasonal hits since 2010, and “All I Want for Christmas is You” has been No. 1 for 57 of the 62 weeks it has run, stated Gary Trust, chart director. Will Page, Spotify’s former chief economist and creator of the ebook “Pivot,” estimates the music will exceed $100 million in earnings this vacation season.
“By most objective measures,” Bennett says, “it’s the most successful Christmas song of all time.”
As Afanasieff has instructed it, a lot of the work on “All I Want for Christmas is You” was executed by him and Carey working in a rented home in the summertime of 1994. The staff had a historical past, engaged on Carey’s albums “Emotions” and “Music Box.”
He began with a boogie-woogie piano, tossing out melodic concepts that Carey would reply to with lyrics, he stated on final yr’s podcast, “Hot Takes & Deep Dives with Jess Rothschild” (Afanasieff didn’t return messages from The Associated Press). Later, Carey accomplished the lyrics herself and Afanasieff recorded all of the devices, he stated.
Then issues grew to become difficult. Carey was married on the time to Tommy Mottola, head of Sony Music. They broke up in 1997 and her relationship with Afanasieff, who stored working for Mottola, grew to become a casualty of that fractured marriage. Afanasieff stated they’ve spoken as soon as in additional than 20 years, and it his contributions have been written out of Carey’s telling of the music’s creation.
On “Good Morning America” final month, she stated, “I was working on it by myself so I was writing on this little Casio keyboard, writing down words and thinking about, ’What do I think about Christmas? What do I love? What do I want? What do I dream of?” she says. “And that’s what started it.”
Afanasieff sounds nearly bewildered by the flip of occasions. He instructed Variety in 1999 that each vacation season he has to defend himself in opposition to individuals who don’t imagine he co-wrote the music.
“Mariah has been very wonderful, positive and a force of nature,” he instructed Variety. “She’s the one that made the song a hit and she’s awesome. But she definitely does not share credit where credit is due.”
Last month, songwriters Andy Stone and Troy Powers sued Carey and Afanasieff in federal court docket in California, searching for $20 million in copyright infringement and citing their very own 1989 nation music, “All I Want for Christmas is You.”
Their music has the same theme, with a narrator wanting a love curiosity earlier than Christmas comforts. The writers cite an “overwhelming likelihood” the Carey and Afanasieff had heard their music.
The two songs don’t have any musical similarities, Berklee’s Bennett says, and the theme is hardly distinctive. He identified Bing Crosby’s “You’re All I Want for Christmas,” Carla Thomas’ “All I Want for Christmas is You” and Buck Owens’ “All I Want for Christmas, Dear, is You.”
Says the musicologist: “It’s nonsense.”
In his podcast look, Afanasieff famous how Foster as soon as instructed him that “All I Want for Christmas is You” was the final music to enter the Christmas canon and “that vault is sealed.”
Foster instructed AP he exaggerated slightly, however not loads. Writing a brand new vacation music is brutally exhausting, because you’re competing with not simply present hits however tons of of years of songs and recollections. The previous classics by no means go away.
“I just stay away from them, because they scare me,” Foster says. “Lyrically, it’s sort of all been done before — better than I can ever do.”
While he appreciates Foster’s praise, Afanasieff instructed Rothschild that he hoped others don’t take it to coronary heart.
“I urge songwriters every year,” he says. “It’s time to write the next ‘All I Want for Christmas is You.’”
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David Bauder writes about media, music and leisure for The Associated Press. Follow him at http://twitter.com/dbauder
David Bauder, The Associated Press