Legacy Recordings’ 2020 holiday music film series continues with holiday classics from Perry Como, Andy Williams and Eartha Kitt
Happy Holidays from Legacy Recordings!!
New Animated Films for Perry Como’s “It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas,” Andy Williams’ “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of The Year” and Eartha Kitt’s “Santa Baby”
Toronto, ON – December 7, 2020 – Legacy Recordings, the catalog division of Sony Music Entertainment, rings in the yuletide with a series of new seasonal short music films, especially created for classic holiday records beloved since the pre-video era.
Legacy’s 2020 holiday music film series continues with the premieres newly-created animated videos for “It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas” by Perry Como and The Fontane Sisters (1951), “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year” by Andy Williams (1963) and Eartha Kitt’s “Santa Baby,” the best-selling Christmas song of 1953.
watch Perry Como – “It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas” HERE
watch Andy Williams – “It’s The Most Wonderful Time of the Year” HERE
watch Eartha Kitt – “Santa Baby” HERE
watch Frank Sinatra – “Let it Snow! Let it Snow! Let it Snow! HERE
watch Elvis Presley – “Blue Christmas” HERE
watch The Ronettes – “Sleigh Ride” HERE
Perry Como’s “It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas” comes alive in a new animated film by Ginevra Boni, a design-driven animator and illustrator from Italy. Obsessed with color and movement, GIBO creates visual streams of consciousness in her work. Inspired by vintage 1950’s illustrations, Boni decided to base the narrative of her film around an alternative ‘preparation’ for the holidays, a wonderland where anthropomorphized ornaments, animated by the holiday spirit, become living seasonal mascots, decorating the tree under their own volition. “It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas” is both timeless and nostalgic.
A seasonal standard composed in 1951 by Meredith Willson (best-known for The Music Man), “It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas” has been performed over the years by a variety of artists–including Bing Crosby, Johnny Mathis, Michael Bublé and others–but it’s the 1951 RCA Victor hit recording by Perry Como and The Fontane Sisters with Mitchell Ayres & His Orchestra that defines the song. One of the most widely played holiday records in history, Perry Como’s “It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas” had more than 128 million streams on Spotify (as of August 30, 2020).
The new music video for Andy Williams’ “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year” was created by Qais Sarhan, an illustrator and animation director based in the UK. An animated geometric ballet of iconic Christmas elements–dancing elves, toy robots, teddy bears, nutcrackers and tree ornaments, Sarhan’s playful storyline begins in a snow globe on a shelf in Santa’s workshop before opening up a fantastic, and nostalgic, world of heartwarming holiday magic.
“It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year” is a popular seasonal song written in 1963 by Edward Pola and George Wyle, it was recorded and released that year on The Andy Williams Christmas Album, the popular crooner’s first holiday collection. “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year” celebrates activities associated with the holiday season, focusing on heartwarming gatherings with friends and families, sharing gifts and stories, singing carols and playing in the snow. Selected multiple years (1968. 1976, 2009, 2012) as the theme song for Christmas seals, “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year” has been covered by artists including Johnny Mathis, Garth Brooks, Harry Connick, Jr. and others and is often placed on lists of Top 10 contemporary Christmas songs. In December 2011, “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year” debuted at #8 on Billboard’s newly-christened Holiday 100, the seasonal Christmas singles chart, where it has recharted every year since. In December 2016, Willlams’ recording of the song began appearing on the Billboard Hot 100, breaking into the Top 10 for the first time in December 2018. On the Hot 100 chart from the 2019 holiday season (January 4, 2020), “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year” reached it’s all-time peak of #7.
The new “Santa Baby” music video is designed and directed by Kelly Jones, founder of Shibazzle, a black-owned visual media + design house, and produced by Cousins, a queer-owned New York based production studio, in their first collaboration. A contemporary secular holiday classic, Eartha Kitt’s “Santa Baby” has been transformed visually into a cinematic homage to the singer’s life and career with smooth and sexy animation utilizing an evocative color palette drawing the viewer into the charms of Eartha’s dreamy wish list.
Written by Joan Javits and Philip Springer (aka “Tony Springer”), “Santa Baby”was originally released in 1953 as a single by Eartha Kitt with Henri René and His Orchestra, later appearing on Eartha’s self-titled first extended play (EP) in 1954. A sly yuletide wish list–including a yacht, a duplex and the deed to a platinum mine–sung to a sugar-daddy Santa by a seductive Miss Kitt, “Santa Baby” became an immediate smash, its risqué content and sexy delivery breaking the rules for Christmas-themed music. One of those rare songs–and records–that’s found a permanent place in popular consciousness, “Santa Baby” has been featured in various films and television series over the decades and has been covered by artists including Madonna, Kylie Minogue, Taylor Swift, Michael Bublé, Gwen Stefani and many others.
Launched in November, Legacy’s 2020 holiday streaming video series presents new animated films for Frank Sinatra’s 1950 hit “Let It Snow”(aka “Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!”), and classic tracks from 1963’s A Christmas Gift for You from Phil Spector including “Sleigh Ride” by The Ronettes (featuring Ronnie Spector) and Darlene Love’s “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home).”
Legacy’s seasonal holiday videos are the latest releases in an ambitious ongoing label catalog project. Home to the world’s foremost library of historically important commercial recordings, Legacy has unprecedented access to works by the most significant musical artists of the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries, many of which have never had correlated visual content. Over the next weeks, months and years, Legacy’s curatorial staff will comb the archives for appropriate musical content to merge with new visual components. The label will be revisiting major hits and much-loved songs from the pre-video era and commissioning contemporary artists to create engaging new visual content.