From James Brown to The Supremes, Otis Redding to Baby Washington, some of the best soul singers ever to have walked the Earth have recorded some of the most memorable Christmas songs of all time. Please Come Home For Christmas, originally released in 1960 by Charles Brown, is among these classics. The sorrow and yearning in the lyrics have appealed to artists throughout the decades, spawning plenty of intriguing covers that challenge the cliché of Christmas as one big happy day – including versions by artists as disparate as Eagles and Cher.
Listen to the best Christmas songs here.
Who wrote Please Come Home For Christmas?
Please Come Home For Christmas was co-written by Charles Brown, the artist who first recorded the song, and Gene Redd. At the time, Redd was an A&R man at King Records (and, later on, Redd would go own to produce Kool And The Gang). King Records, along with its subsidiary labels Federal and Bethlehem, was a forward-thinking company that put out records by dozens of R&B pioneers, including James Brown, Etta Jones, Champion Jack Dupree and Hank Ballard.
The melancholy mood of the song reflects Brown’s background in the blues. Brown had grown as an artist during the 40s, a time when the blues’ popularity was at a peak, and it’s this authenticity that gives Please Come Home For Christmas its feel of longing and hurt. Yet there was also another, more accessible side to Brown; he played piano in Johnny Moore’s Three Blazers, a gentler outfit that smoothed out some of the blues’ rawer emotions. This softer touch is also apparent in Please Come Home For Christmas.