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The Chimney Song (2:06) Original song, sung by a little girl. The song describes the ensuing months after Santa Claus gets stuck in someone's chimney. We Wish You Weren't Living With Us (0:44) Parody of "We Wish You a Merry Christmas". Sung as a normal Christmas carol. About relatives who overstay their visit, becoming a nuisance to the host.
Rated X Mas (often stylized as Rated Xmas) is a Christmas music parody album by Matt Rogers. The songs on the album are parodies of popular Christmas songs, but with graphic and sexual lyrics. The songs on the album are parodies of popular Christmas songs, but with graphic and sexual lyrics.
More Twisted Christmas (alternately titled "Bob Rivers Presents More Twisted Christmas") is the third Christmas album by Bob Rivers & Twisted Radio, released in 1997.Whereas the first two albums in the Twisted Christmas series featured some original songs, spoken word comedy and instrumentals, all of the songs on this album are direct parodies, either Christmas-themed parodies of popular songs ...
Related: 30+ Best New-ish Christmas Songs You Need to Add to Your Holiday Playlist in 2023. 7. "Very First Christmas" by SpongeBob SquarePants.
The quintessential Christmas crush song, Mariah Carey's "All I Want for Christmas Is You" finally hit No. 1 in 2019—25 years after its initial release! 2. Nat King Cole, "The Christmas Song"
Rivers released a second album of humorous holiday-themed music in 1993 entitled I Am Santa Claus (the title track was a parody of Black Sabbath's song Iron Man). [16] Later, three other Christmas-themed albums were released: More Twisted Christmas (1997); Chipmunks Roasting On an Open Fire (2000); and White Trash Christmas (2002).
The title track of Harry Connick, Jr.'s 1993 Christmas album, "When My Heart Finds Christmas" is the perfect romantic holiday song for that special someone. 'Santa Tell Me' by Ariana Grande
In December 2009, a parody of "Feliz Navidad" titled "The Illegal Alien Christmas Song", more commonly referred to as "Illegals in My Yard", was created by radio producers Matt Fox and A. J. Rice and posted on the website for Human Events, a Washington-based weekly publication.