George Michael
No. 3, “Last Christmas” (Wham!, 1984)
Died: 2016
Holiday music is one area of pop music where being dead isn’t a hindrance. A slight majority of the songs on Billboard’s Holiday 100, which relaunches this week, are by artists who have passed on. (The exact tally is 52 out of 100 – and six of the top 10.)
Several of the artists who provide the soundtrack to holiday specials, parties and trips to the mall have been dead longer than most of the current pop audience has been alive. Bing Crosby, who sang the Oscar-winning “White Christmas” in the 1942 film Holiday Inn, died in 1977. Elvis Presley, who gave us “Blue Christmas” in 1957, also died that year.
Vince Guaraldi, whose music for A Charlie Brown Christmas has been a part of every holiday season since that Peabody-winning TV special first aired in 1965, died in 1976. Judy Garland, whose “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” has made us misty she introduced it in her 1944 film Meet Me in St. Louis, died in 1969. Nat “King” Cole, who introduced “The Christmas Song” in 1946 when he was fronting The King Cole Trio, died in 1965.
Crosby has seven songs on the current Holiday 100, more than any other departed artist. Cole is tied for second place with Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra and Andy Williams, with four songs each.
Holiday music has greatly extended these and many other artists’ era of relevance. Williams’ last non-holiday song to crack the Hot 100 was in 1976. Martin last charted with a non-holiday song in 1969; Crosby in 1957, the year before the inception of the Hot 100.
When it comes to holiday music, whether an artist is alive or dead doesn’t matter very much. In a way, that’s fitting. Family members who are no longer with us are still frequently part of our holiday traditions. You may serve your holiday dinner on your Grandma’s treasured china, or always make your aunt’s special cranberry sauce, or make a point of playing your mom’s favorite Johnny Mathis Christmas album. You may remember these departed family members when you say grace before dinner – or even bother to say grace at all because they would have wanted it that way.
More than any other time of the year, it’s a time for tradition. And music is very much part of those traditions.
Here are all the artists on the current Holiday 100 (dated Dec. 7, 2024) who are no longer with us. They are ranked in order of the current chart position of their highest-charting song, with other charted songs by the same artist grouped with them. Songs by duos and groups are included if the lead singer on that song has died. We also include the departed leaders of two mostly instrumental acts – Guaraldi, the leader of the Vince Guaraldi Trio, and Paul O’Neill, the founder, instrumentalist and composer of Trans-Siberian Orchestra. The year shown in parentheses is the year the song was first released by that artist. (Some were re-recorded by the same artist multiple times.)
No. 3, “Last Christmas” (Wham!, 1984)
Died: 2016
No. 4, “Jingle Bell Rock” (1957)
Died: 1997
No. 5, “A Holly Jolly Christmas” (1964)
No. 53, “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” (1964)
Died: 1995
No. 19, “White Christmas” (Bing Crosby with Ken Darby Singers & John Scott Trotter & His Orchestra, 1942)
No. 45, “Mele Kalikimaka (Merry Christmas)” (Bing Crosby & The Andrews Sisters, 1950)
No. 49, “I’ll Be Home for Christmas” (Bing Crosby With John Scott Trotter and His Orchestra, 1943)
No. 75, “It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas” (Bing Crosby With Jud Conlon’s Rhythmaires & John Scott Trotter & His Orchestra, 1957)
No. 78, “Do You Hear What I Hear?” (Bing Crosby With Ralph Carmichael Orchestra & Chorus, 1963)
No. 89, “Winter Wonderland” (1962)
No. 92, “The Little Drummer Boy” (1962)
Died: 1977
No. 20, “Here Comes Santa Claus (Right Down Santa Claus Lane)” (1949)
No. 27, “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” (Gene Autry & The Pinafores) (1949)
No. 83, “Up on the Housetop (Ho! Ho! Ho!)” (Gene Autry with Carl Conter’s Orchestra, 1952)
Died: 1998
No. 22, “Blue Christmas” (1957)
No. 81, “Here Comes Santa Claus (Right Down Santa Claus Lane)” (1957)
Died: 1977
No. 23, “Santa Baby” (Eartha Kitt with Henri Rene and His Orchestra, 1953)
Died: 2008
No. 24, “You’re a Mean One, Mr. Grinch” (1966)
Died: 2005
No. 30, “Santa Claus Is Comin’ to Town” (The Jackson 5, 1970)
No. 42, “I Saw Mommy Kissing Santa Claus” (The Jackson 5, 1970)
Died: 2009
No. 31, “Christmastime Is Here” (Vince Guaraldi Trio, 1965)
No. 32, “Linus and Lucy (Peanuts Theme)” (Vince Guaraldi Trio, 1965)
No. 62, “O Tannenbaum” (Vince Guaraldi Trio, 1965)
Died: 1976
No. 33, “This Christmas” (1970)
Died: 1979
No. 35, “Christmas Eve (Sarajevo 12/24)” (Trans-Siberian Orchestra, 1995)
No. 72, “Christmas Canon” (Trans-Siberian Orchestra, 1998)
Died: 2017
No. 37, “Happy Xmas (War Is Over)” (John & Yoko/The Plastic Ono Band With the Harlem Community Choir, 1971)
Died: 1980
No. 66, “Frosty the Snowman” (1950)
Died: 1980
No. 69, “White Christmas” (The Drifters Featuring Clyde McPhatter and Bill Pinkney, 1954)
Died: 1972 (McPhatter); 2007 (Pinkey)
No. 97, “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” (Judy Garland With Georgie Stoll & His Orchestra, 1944)
Died: 1969
No. 98, “Merry Christmas, Darling” (Carpenters, 1970)
Died: 1983