In 2001? As I remember that song didn’t become a dominant Christmas song until Love Actually came out in 2003, and still took a few years before it became the single most popular Christmas song on the radio, first reaching number 1 in 2019.
As of this picture nobody (including Mariah Carey) had any idea what that song would become.
I find it interesting that as a European, I don’t think I’ve ever heard that infamous song.
But then we don’t really do the whole thematic Christmas song thing here.
The problem is that it’s genuinely a great song, therefore over here it’s played ad nauseum leading up to Christmas in every shop that plays music. And literally every chain store plays music
She’s smiling because it’s almost time for her favorite song to start playing on the radio.
In 2001? As I remember that song didn’t become a dominant Christmas song until Love Actually came out in 2003, and still took a few years before it became the single most popular Christmas song on the radio, first reaching number 1 in 2019.
As of this picture nobody (including Mariah Carey) had any idea what that song would become.
I wonder how much she makes every year on just that song
If I recall correctly, about $3 million every year since she holds rights as the performer and co-writer
Writing is where it’s at with royalties, too.
That’s pretty impressive for a two month run.
According to Wikipedia, it charts EVERY year during Christmas in digital sales. Probably a lot.
I believe you that for most Christmas but did it chart Last Christmas?
I find it interesting that as a European, I don’t think I’ve ever heard that infamous song.
But then we don’t really do the whole thematic Christmas song thing here.
The problem is that it’s genuinely a great song, therefore over here it’s played ad nauseum leading up to Christmas in every shop that plays music. And literally every chain store plays music
Do you pronounce it “an yoora-pee-unn” or “a you’re a peeing?”
I’ll leave it as an exercise for the reader.