
Every December, music executives pretend they have a choice. They don’t. Christmas albums show up like distant relatives who drink your good whisky, tell the same stories, and somehow leave richer than when they arrived.
So today, as a benevolent and slightly unhinged promoter, I am proud to present two albums nobody asked for, everybody needs, and several therapists will eventually bill for.
One is Rock. One is Country. Both are festive crimes against subtlety.
Grab a drink. Possibly two. This is going to get loud, twangy, and emotionally confusing.
If Rock Artists Sang Christmas
This album is wrapped in leather, smells faintly of eggnog and regret, and comes with a parental advisory sticker that says “Festive, but still inappropriate.”
Welcome to the Jingle – Guns & Roses
Because nothing says Christmas cheer like Axl screaming while elves question their life choices.
Don’t Stop Believin’ in Santa – Journey
Every mall needs this song on loop so parents can cling to hope while their credit cards weep softly.
Wish You Were Beer – Pink Floyd
A slow, introspective reminder that Christmas is just loneliness with more tinsel, unless there’s beer.
Born to Wrap – Bruce Springsteen
A blue collar anthem about wrapping gifts at midnight, shirtless, with a single lightbulb and unresolved feelings.
Pour Some Sugar Cookies on Me – Def Leppard
The baking montage nobody asked for but everyone secretly enjoys.
I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Shopping For – U2
Played exclusively in stores where the staff has already emotionally checked out.
Back in Wrap – AC/DC
Aggressive gift wrapping. No scissors. Just teeth and pure rage.
Here I Glow Again – Whitesnake
A power ballad about inflatable lawn decorations that absolutely do not need to be that bright.
Smells Like Tree Spirit – Nirvana
Grunge meets pine needles. The Christmas song that makes you question capitalism while still buying batteries.
Highway To Yule – AC/DC
The sleigh is moving at unsafe speeds. Helmets are optional. Bells are not.
Winter of 69 – Bryan Adams
Nobody knows what actually happened that winter, but it definitely involved frostbite and poor decisions.
The Elves Are Back in Town – Thin Lizzy
Because someone needs to explain why they’re all drunk by noon.
More Than a Freezing – Boston
A soaring anthem about standing outside in December wondering why Canada exists.
Three Fallin’ – Tom Petty
Three ornaments. Every year. Gravity always wins… or the cat.
Frost in the Wind – Kansas
A haunting reminder that cold doesn’t care about your feelings.
You Give Claus a Bad Name – Bon Jovi
Finally, someone brave enough to call Santa out on the whole “judging you all year” thing.
Sweet Caroling – Neil Diamond
You will sing along. Loudly. Incorrectly. Proudly.
If Country Artists Sang Christmas
This album smells like pine, diesel, and emotional honesty. It wears a flannel shirt and judges you quietly.
Take Me Home, Winter Roads – John Denver
A gentle song about snow, longing, and being stuck behind a plow.
Friends in Snow Places – Garth Brooks
Country Christmas rule number one: never shovel alone.
Mistletoe by Morning – George Strait
Romantic. Subtle. Possibly ends with coffee and regret.
Chatta-Ho-Ho-chee – Alan Jackson
Santa’s southern cousin shows up with a cooler and zero concern for bedtime.
Red-Sled Woman – Gretchen Wilson
She didn’t ask for help and she doesn’t need it.
Elves ’Round Here – Blake Shelton
Small town elves. Big opinions. Somebody’s feelings get hurt.
The Prance – Garth Brooks
Because even reindeer deserve a dramatic entrance.
Bless the Frozen Road – Rascal Flatts
A heartfelt tribute to black ice and questionable tires.
I Walk The Lights – Johnny Cash
Deep. Dark. Probably filmed in black and white.
Tennesse Eggnog – Chris Stapleton
Thick. Strong. You’re not driving.
Santa Tried – Merle Haggard
A sad but honest song about expectations versus reality.
Candycane Wine – Deana Carter
Sounds sweet. Hits hard.
Eggnog in My Hand – Eric Church
Christmas but make it slightly illegal.
Boot Sleighin’ Boogie – Brooks & Dunn
Line dancing. On ice. What could go wrong.
Should’ve Been a Reindeer – Toby Keith
Because working overtime suddenly sounds better than family politics.
Ain’t Goin’ Down (’Til the Sleigh Shows Up) – Garth Brooks
Stubborn. Festive. Heroic.
Tinsel Fancy – Reba McEntire
Elegant, sparkly, and just a little judgmental.
Final Pitch from Your Slightly Unstable Promoter
These albums won’t bring world peace. They won’t fix family drama. They definitely won’t make fruitcake edible.
But they will remind you that Christmas, like music, is better when it doesn’t take itself too seriously.
So crank it up. Sing it wrong. Laugh a little louder than necessary. And remember, if the season ever feels overwhelming, just picture AC/DC wrapping gifts or Johnny Cash staring down a string of lights like it owes him money.
Now that’s holiday spirit.
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