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On Billboard magazine's special year-end weekly Christmas Albums chart, A Christmas Album spent all five weeks that the chart was published in late 1967 at No. 1, making it the best-selling holiday album of 1967 in the U.S. [3] The album charted for the first time on Billboard's weekly Billboard 200 album sales chart in December 1981, peaking at position No. 108 during a five-week chart run. [4]
Barbra Streisand, "Jingle Bells" Jingle Bells is certainly not a wacky song, but this Streisand version from a 1967 Christmas album speeds the celebratory tune up so much that it's almost like a ...
Milwaukeen Richard Parker worked with Bobby Whiteside to create jingles for a while, and then decided to use their musical hook skills to collaborate on a pop hit. Parker explained "we went into the studio and recorded a very complete demo with string arrangement and everything. some established artists were interested but we felt the song was just too strong to let go".
In 2009, Streisand recorded a new, studio version of "Wee Small Hours" for her album, Love is the Answer, produced by jazz artist Diana Krall. The Four Freshmen , on their 1994 album Voices in Standards
This pop-punk gem's upbeat tempo and catchy hook belie its bummer lyrics about struggling with depression around the holidays, ... 90. Barbra Streisand, "Jingle Bells"
Jack Gold - musical arrangement on "Jingle Bells" Jason Halbert - vocal producer on "My Grown-Up Christmas List" Kerri Lawson - choir vocals (1, 7) Maren Morris - guest vocals on "When You Believe" Sean O'Loughlin - conductor, orchestration on "Jingle Bells" Orchestra Members - various instruments on "Jingle Bells"
The song was originally considered for Streisand's film version of A Star Is Born from the previous year, but it was not included on that project. Charlie Calello, the co-producer of "My Heart Belongs to Me", rehearsed the song with Streisand by playing piano while she sang the lyrics. The instrumental portion of the song was recorded first ...
The best-known version of the song was a hit for Barbra Streisand in 1971 (as "Hands Off The Man (Flim Flam Man)"). It was the final single of three releases from her Stoney End LP. The song was suggested to Streisand by record producer Richard Perry. The song reached number 82 on the US Billboard Hot 100 in early 1971.