I think it's found in Jeph Loeb's unbelievably awesome The Long Halloween, but the single greatest panel in comic book history shows the Joker, tiptoeing through the empty house of Harvey Dent, wearing a Santa hat and goofily singing the following to himself:
Jingle bells, Batman smells
Robin laid an egg
The Batmobile lost a wheel
And the Joker got away...
In terms of meta-jokes, there can be none finer. First time I read those panels, I laughed out loud - not because of the Joker's obvious insanity, but because I immediately went back to the fifth grade, or whatever year it was that I first heard that song. Sung, obviously, to the tune of "Jingle Bells," it stuck with me because A) it was horribly catchy, B) it combined Christmas with Batman, every boy's two favorite things, and C) it was more than slightly irreverent.
For a kid whose rebellious streak began and ended with taking small sips of milk directly from the carton late at night when no one else was awake, this song was a delicious little piece of devilment.
It was also my introduction into the world of Christmas novelty tunes, a world that - too often unfortunately - has expanded considerably over the years.
Novelty songs are taken for granted now, but once upon a time they really were novel because they took the over-inflated sentimentality out of Christmas by poking fun at it. It's hard to be schmaltzy when you're singing songs that seemingly encourage arson in the local hall of education.
(For the record, I found the subversive "Deck the Halls" to be hysterical when I was a kid. My classmates and I used to hum the melody - sans words - while sitting in class during our seventh grade year at Shiloh Middle School. We were stuck in a trailer just outside of the gym that felt more like a Siberian work camp than a classroom on a chilly winter day. I suppose the idea of setting the school on fire was as much for warmth as anything else. But, all that to say - we had a kid get suspended from school for singing the song in the hallway. The principal heard him and decided the song was tantamount to a terrorist threat and she ran his little butt out of school for a few days. Suffice it to say, Christmas cheer went down considerably after that.)
Of course, the novelty song epoch peaked with Grandma Got Run Over By A Reindeer, a country-inspired ditty that combined a nifty little hook with some naughty little lyrics. Naturally, all of us kids loved it, and we were quite surprised when most of the adults did too.
Who knew geriatricide was so popular?
Heck, that song was so popular that even in the small, ultra-conservative church where I grew up, a place where instruments weren't allowed to be plugged in (not even the organ), someone sang the song as a Christmas special - and got away with it!
That being said, on a dreary, wet December day, a day where there is literally little sunlight, allow me to brighten your life with my list of The Best Christmas Novelty Songs Ever. No, it isn't an authoritative list, and I'll happily take recommendations for alternate titles should you be able to make your case for another song. But this is a pseudo-scientifically compiled list based on literally minutes of searching Google, so you'll really have to come with a strong argument to get me to change my mind (or at the very least point out a song that I like that I forgot about).
So, without further ado, here are my five Best Christmas Novelty Songs Ever, from least to greatest:
5. The Restroom Door Said Gentlemen (parody of God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen): the link is to Bob Rivers' version, but I first heard it on Randy & Spiff in the morning, back in the days when Atlanta had decent radio stations. Randy Cook and Spiff Carner were the morning hosts on Fox 97.1 and they were known for their comedy bits, one of which happened to be parody songs by a group called The Shower Stall Singers (boy, am I dating myself - and the sad part is, I didn't have to Google one bit of that info).
Anyway, during Christmas one year they trotted this song out and my mother nearly drove off the road. We were rolling with laughter. To this day, it's one of the most memorable radio bits I've ever heard - and no, I don't know why that is, other than I'm just weird.
4. Grandma Got Run Over By A Reindeer: I've probably covered this enough in the preceding paragraphs, but still, this song stands out for its sheer ubiquity when I was a kid. Did you know that it was originally recorded in 1979? I didn't either. The things you learn...
3. The Hippopotamus Song: the linked video is a strange bit of noir absurdity, but it matches well with what is easily one of the silliest, strangest, and catchiest of all Christmas novelty songs.
My grandfather, Pop Emmett, thought this song was hilarious and somehow that thought infected that entire side of my family. I seem to recall that there were at least two Christmases in which this song played a prominent role of some sort, including one Christmas where my mother lost her mind and sang it repeatedly for some unknown reason. The things you remember. On a personal note, my favorite word in any Christmas song, ever, is "rhinoceroususes."
2. Run Rudolph Run: ah, the inimitable Chuck Berry. It's a little slower than I actually remember it; for some reason, I recall the song has having a scorching guitar intro and then keeping a frantic pace throughout. Maybe I consumed too much sugar as a kid, because the linked version is about half the speed I remember. Oh well - the song still stands the test of time, even if it does sound like every other Chuck Berry song. Plus, it's a heck of a lot more fun compared to the Gene Autry song about Rudolph.
(What? Don't look at me like that. I still love the original Rudolph, but come on - Berry's song is easily the more fun one.)
1. The Chipmunk Song (Christmas Don't Be Late): the original version is still the best, and the artwork shown in the YouTube clip is exactly the artwork I remember for the Chipmunks. When you're a kid, there's just something priceless about the sound of those little rodents singing - a fact that has recently been re-emphasized in my household through my kids. We put in the big screen version of Alvin, Simon and Theodore just last night, and my kids bobbed along and sang happily with the version of The Chipmunk Song that they re-mixed for the movie. It's still catchy, but has a much edgier sound, which is absolutely ridiculous to type about a song performed by high-pitched tree rats, but somehow summarizes life as a parent.
So what do you think? Are your favorites on this list? Which ones did I miss? Let me know in the comments below!
Gail Moore
12:30 pm on Wednesday, December 7, 2011
I LOVE the "Restroom Door Said Gentlemen" song! SO CLEVER! Many of the others, unfortunately, just get on my nerves when sung for the thousandth time by my kids.
Jason Brooks
12:42 pm on Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Gail -
That seems the be the unfortunate destiny for most Christmas novelty songs: an eternity of annoyance to all who hear them. And yet, they persist...
Abbie Reynolds
1:06 pm on Wednesday, December 7, 2011
First off thank you so much for the Randy and Spiff shout out. To this day I say "Good Times... Great Oldies..." and then I wait for someone to finish it with Fox 97! But it never happens.
Secondly. How could you forget "I'm getting nothing for Christmas" ??? Most inappropriate and hysterical song ever.
Jason Brooks
2:04 pm on Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Abbie -
I've actually never heard of that song before. Or, if I have, then I don't identify it by that title. (OK - just Googled it, and I vaguely remember it. Just not a song that stood out to me, I suppose.)
And chances are nobody gets the Fox 97 identifier because you live in Chicago.
Abbie Reynolds
5:41 pm on Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Well I can assure you that "I'm getting nothing for Christmas" was on the same cassette tape as all those other songs in the Reynolds household. I'm pretty sure my uncle recorded them all off the radio and compiled them onto a goofy Christmas mixed cassette that we all loved!! (Yes, the Reynolds family stole songs without paying for them even before it became a big trend online. We're pretty classy.)
And I know my location hinders the jingle. I just got spoiled because I lived with a girl from Snellville in college for three years who always finished the ending with the appropriate amount of gusto on Fox 97! I miss that.
...I also miss being able to walk to class without having my lips freeze together. Its the little things in life that make Georgia so enjoyable.
Bob
7:40 am on Thursday, December 8, 2011
I'm going with "Snoopy's Christmas" by the Royal Guardsmen. The only songs I have ever heard from there were novelty, and that song is a novelty song if ever there was one. I will also reference "Father Christmas" by the Kinks. Who doesn't love a bell ringing Santa getting mugged by a group of kids?
Jason Brooks
2:58 pm on Thursday, December 8, 2011
I don't think I've ever heard "Father Christmas" but I love the Kinks. I'll have to Google that one and give it a listen. Thanks for the recommendations!
Grant
9:19 am on Friday, December 9, 2011
What?
Sorry ... any list of top Christmas novelty songs that doesnt include Seymour Swine & The Squealers doing "Blue Christmas" just doesnt get the job done. If you can listen to the guy giggling in the background and not smile there is something seriously wrong with ya. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ykY8_Ttogjk&feature=related
North Georgia Weather
7:47 am on Saturday, December 10, 2011
I have that in mp3 format, it's great!!!
Jason Brooks
10:24 pm on Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Grant - one of my best friends upbraided me for this omission. I have no excuses. Simply missed it. Total wh-wh-wh-, uh, whi-, whi-...
I just forgot.
Grant
9:23 am on Friday, December 9, 2011
Another Bob River's favorite that should make the list is "Walkin Round In Women's Underwear" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tTVBYNHT-p4
Hal Schneider
8:44 pm on Friday, December 9, 2011
I really love "Santa Baby": http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbbQwecCzo8
Liz Kennedy
12:36 am on Saturday, December 10, 2011
Right on Hal - Eartha Kitt was smooth - though Madonna did a pretty decent remake YEARS later - my humble two-cents!
Vanzetta Evans
10:35 pm on Saturday, December 10, 2011
Yes! My favorite too! Madonna's is pretty good as well. I heard the WORST remake ever though the other day. So sad! :-(
Jason Brooks
10:20 pm on Tuesday, December 13, 2011
It seems that once upon a time someone ruined this song for me by telling me that it was just one long innuendo. I was never able to listen to it the same way again. Especially the line about the chimney.
North Georgia Weather
7:54 am on Saturday, December 10, 2011
Bob and Doug McKenzie's 12 Days of Christmas
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l2oPio60mK4
Scott Bernarde
7:52 am on Monday, December 12, 2011
Good one, hoser!
Scott
1:45 pm on Monday, December 12, 2011
YES!!! Bob & Doug is the best! Take off eh! You Hoser!
Jason Brooks
10:23 pm on Tuesday, December 13, 2011
Oh my word. That was hysterical. I haven't thought about the McKenzie brothers in ages...
Lynn Griffeth
9:20 pm on Wednesday, December 14, 2011
I still love "I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Clause" and (not sure of title but "Santa Clause Is Coming With A Bag of Toys... to bring all the presents to little girls and boys. If name) is ugly he will pass him by and bring (me) the presents and leave (name) to cry!
Jason Brooks
8:54 am on Thursday, December 15, 2011
Lynn -
The best version of "I Saw Mommy" that I've ever heard is still the Jackson 5. Just can't beat Michael Jackson on that song.
I'll have to Google the lyrics to the other song you referenced and see if I can figure out what it is. I have to say, you've gotten me intrigued... :)
Brian Crawford
6:06 pm on Monday, December 19, 2011
Santa Looked A Lot Like Daddy - Buck Owens and the Buckaroos. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ewbk1uHwJSs
Brian Crawford
6:10 pm on Monday, December 19, 2011
How about a whacky 80's dance-a-thon Christmas. Christmas Wrapping - The Waitresses http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2SzjDOk_u9I.