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Please Come Home for Christmas

1960 single by Charles Brown


Summary

1960 single by Charles Brown

FieldValue
namePlease Come Home for Christmas
coverCharles Brown - Please Come Home for Christmas.jpg
typesingle
artistCharles Brown
albumCharles Brown Sings Christmas Songs
B-side"Christmas (Comes but Once a Year)" by Amos Milburn{{cite web
lastKelly
firstRed
titleAmos Milburn – Christmas (Comes But Once A Year) (KING 5405)
workThe B Side
dateDecember 19, 2005
urlhttps://redkelly.blogspot.com/2005/12/amos-milburn-christmas-comes-but-once.html
access-dateApril 2, 2010}}
released1960
recordedSeptember 21, 1960
length
labelKing 45-5405
next_titleAngel Baby (Charles Brown & Group)
next_year1961

| B-side = "Christmas (Comes but Once a Year)" by Amos Milburn{{cite web | access-date = April 2, 2010}}

  • R&B
  • Christmas
  • Charles Brown
  • Gene Redd "Please Come Home for Christmas" is a Christmas song written in 1960 and released the same year by the American blues singer and pianist Charles Brown. Entering the US Billboard Hot 100 chart in December 1961, the tune, which Brown co-wrote with Gene Redd, peaked at position number 76. The single also appeared on Billboard magazine's Christmas Singles chart for nine holiday seasons, reaching number 1 in 1972. "Please Come Home for Christmas" includes a number of characteristics of Christmas music, such as multiple references in the lyrics to the Christmas season and Christmas traditions, and the use of a church bell type sound, created using tubular bells, at the start of the song. The song has been covered by many artists, most successfully by the Eagles and Jon Bon Jovi.

Eagles version

| B-side = "Funky New Year"

  • Rock
  • rhythm and blues
  • Christmas music
  • Charles Brown
  • Gene Redd In 1978, the rock band Eagles covered and released "Please Come Home for Christmas" as a holiday single. Their version of the song peaked at number 18 on the US Billboard Hot 100, the first Christmas song to reach the Top 20 on that chart since Roy Orbison's "Pretty Paper" in 1963. This was the first Eagles song to feature Timothy B. Schmit on bass (having replaced founding member Randy Meisner the previous year). The lineup features Don Henley (drums/lead vocals), Glenn Frey (piano, backing vocals), Joe Walsh (guitar, backing vocals), Schmit (bass/backing vocals), and Don Felder (lead guitar). Originally released as a vinyl 7-inch single, it was re-released as a CD single in 1995, reaching number 15 on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart. This version includes the lyrics "bells will be ringing the sad, sad news" (that is, a Christmas alone) as opposed to Brown's original version which references the "glad, glad news" (that is, Christmas in general).

A live version of the song by Eagles was included on their four-disc box set compilation titled Selected Works: 1972–1999, which was released in 2000. This particular version was recorded in concert on December 31, 1999, in Los Angeles.

Forty-two years after it first charted, Eagles' 1978 recording of "Please Come Home for Christmas" re-entered the Billboard Hot 100 chart at No. 45 (on the chart dated January 2, 2021).

Jon Bon Jovi/Bon Jovi version

| B-side =

  • "I Wish Everyday Could Be Like Christmas"
  • "Back Door Santa"
  • Charles Brown
  • Gene Redd Jon Bon Jovi also covered "Please Come Home for Christmas" on the 1992 holiday album A Very Special Christmas 2 in the style of Eagles. In 1994 the same recording was released as a charity single in Europe, but this time instead of being credited as a solo recording by Jon Bon Jovi it was released under the band name Bon Jovi. A promo music video that featured supermodel Cindy Crawford was made to accompany that release. The 1994 single release reached the top 10 in the United Kingdom, Ireland, and Italy. Don Felder of Eagles also featured on guitar in this version of the song.

Critical reception

Stuart Bailie from NME wrote, "Sleighbells, big choirs, some hammond organ. Cindy Crawford snogs Jon on the cover for charidee (well, she'd have to, wouldn't she?). Alright, but not as nice as The Eagles' versh of the song." Mark Frith from Smash Hits gave it a full score of five out of five and named it Best New Single, saying, "Bit of a Christmas standard this [...]. But it's not been sung as perfectly as this. It's a short, sweet song. The right sentiments for Christmas so boyfriends will buy it for girlfriends and vice versa. Perfect."

Charts

Charles Brown

Chart (1962)Peak
positionUS Billboard Hot 100
76

Eagles

Chart (1978–1979)Peak
position
Chart (1995)Peak
positionUS Billboard Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks
15
Chart (2005)Peak
positionUS Billboard Hot Digital Songs
74
Chart (2018)Peak
positionAustralia (ARIA)
94
Chart (2019)Peak
positionUS Rolling Stone Top 100
35
Chart (2020)Peak
position
Chart (2021–2026)Peak
positionAustralia (ARIA)Estonia Airplay (TopHit)Greece International (IFPI)
2013 remasterLithuania (AGATA)Norway (IFPI Norge)Romania Airplay (TopHit)
34
185
27
40
65
97

Bon Jovi

Chart (1994)Peak
positionEurope (Eurochart Hot 100)Finland (Suomen virallinen lista)Italy (Musica e dischi)UK Airplay (Music Week)
28
20
10
10
Chart (2020–2023)Peak
positionPoland (Polish Airplay Top 100)Slovenia (SloTop50)
78
30

Gary Allan

Chart (1997)Peak
position

Lee Roy Parnell

Chart (1997)Peak
position

Willie Nelson

Chart (2004)Peak
position

Josh Gracin

Chart (2006)Peak
position

Martina McBride

Chart (2011–2012)Peak
position

Kelly Clarkson

Chart (2013–2014)Peak
positionSouth Korea International Singles (GAON)US Holiday Digital Songs (Billboard)
97
14

George Ezra

Chart (2021–2022)Peak
positionCroatia (HRT)
20

Certifications and sales

Eagles

Jon Bon Jovi

Notes

References

References

  1. (September 21, 1960). "The Top 40 Christmas Oldies Songs and Holiday Music – #4". Oldies.about.com.
  2. (December 18, 2014). "Christmas song has local roots". USA Today Network.
  3. CD sleeve: Billboard Greatest Christmas Hits (1955 – Present), 1989 Rhino Records Inc.
  4. "Charles Brown blues".
  5. "The Hot 100: The week of January 2, 2021". billboard.com.
  6. (December 3, 1994). "New Releases: Singles".
  7. Bailie, Stuart. (December 10, 1994). "Singles".
  8. Frith, Mark. (December 7, 1994). "New Singles: Best New Single".
  9. (December 29, 2018). "ARIA Chart Watch #505". auspOp.
  10. (December 24, 2019). "Top 100 Songs".
  11. (January 1, 2024). "ARIA Top 50 Singles Chart". [[Australian Recording Industry Association]].
  12. (December 26, 2025). "Eagles — Please Come Home for Christmas — Chart History". [[TopHit]].
  13. "Official IFPI Charts − Digital Singles Chart (International) − Εβδομάδα: 52/2025". [[IFPI Greece]].
  14. (January 2, 2026). "2025 52-os savaitės klausomiausi (Top 100)". [[AGATA (organization).
  15. "Singel 2025 uke 52". [[IFPI Norge]].
  16. (December 12, 2025). "Top Radio Hits Romania Weekly Chart: Dec 11, 2025". [[TopHit]].
  17. (December 24, 1994). "Eurochart Hot 100 Singles".
  18. Pennanen, Timo. (2006). "Sisältää hitin – levyt ja esittäjät Suomen musiikkilistoilla vuodesta 1972". Tammi.
  19. (January 7, 1995). "Top 10 Sales in Europe".
  20. (December 24, 1994). "The Airplay Chart".
  21. "OLiS – oficjalna lista airplay". [[OLiS]].
  22. "SloTop50 – Slovenian official singles chart". slotop50.si.
  23. "Gaon Album Chart 2013년 11월 5주차". [[Gaon Music Chart.
  24. (January 3, 2023). "HRT Airplay Radio Chart No. 1060 - Issue Date: January 2nd 2023". [[Croatian Radiotelevision.
Wikipedia Source

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