Wombling Merry Christmas

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B-side"Madame Cholet"
ReleasedNovember 1974
Length3:18
"Wombling Merry Christmas"
Single by The Wombles
from the album Keep On Wombling
B-side"Madame Cholet"
ReleasedNovember 1974
GenreGlam rock, Christmas, children's music
Length3:18
LabelCBS
SongwriterMike Batt
ProducerMike Batt
The Wombles singles chronology
"Minuetto Allegretto"
(1974)
"Wombling Merry Christmas"
(1974)
"Wombling White Tie and Tails (Foxtrot)"
(1975)
Music video
"Wombling Merry Christmas" on YouTube

"Wombling Merry Christmas" is a Christmas song written by Mike Batt,[1] and recorded by British band the Wombles. Released in November 1974, the song rose to a peak of No. 2 on the UK Singles Chart in December that year, spending 8 weeks in the chart.[2] The song was also released in West Germany, but failed to chart.

The video was recorded in 2011 as part of a re-release that year and shows the Wombles dancing to the song.[3] The band also appeared on Top of the Pops performing the song over Christmas 1974.

Reception

Despite significant success, the song was widely mocked on release. However, the song, labelled as "innocent",[4] and likened to "golden tears falling from heaven"[5] was liked by many, and was described in 2011 as "actually sound[ing] good this time around".[6] Bob Stanley described it as having "more bonhomie than a dozen boxes of crackers".[7]

Later on, Mike Batt remarked on this criticism of the song, saying "...I wrote Wombling Merry Christmas, so I'm not scared of cliches",[8] and that "back in the 1970s people were more in tune with the spirit of these songs".[9]

Chart performance

Chart (1974) Peak position
UK Singles Chart 2

The song was prevented from reaching number one by Mud's "Lonely This Christmas" which (combined with a poor marketing campaign on behalf of the Wombles) 'more than halved' sales.[10]

2011 re-release and Christmas number one campaign

I Wish It Could Be a Wombling Merry Christmas Every Day

References

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