Give Me Your Love for Christmas

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Give_Me_Your_Love_for_Christmas an entity of type: Thing

Give Me Your Love for Christmas is the third Christmas album by American pop singer Johnny Mathis and was released by Columbia Records on October 13, 1969. The oldest song selected for this project was the 1934 classic "Santa Claus Is Coming to Town", which meant there were not the traditional hymns that could be found on his previous Christmas outings. He did, however, cover several other contemporary Christmas favorites along with a few new and lesser-known songs, such as the title track, which was a reworking of an unreleased recording of his from 1961, and "Christmas Day", which came from the then-current Broadway musical Promises, Promises. New versions of "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" and "The Little Drummer Boy", which he also recorded in 1963 for his previous Christmas L rdf:langString
rdf:langString Give Me Your Love for Christmas
rdf:langString Give Me Your Love for Christmas
xsd:integer 30551075
xsd:integer 1054272861
rdf:langString Mathis-Give.jpg
<second> 1811.0
xsd:integer 1970
xsd:integer 1969
rdf:langString Jack Gold
xsd:date 1969-07-15
xsd:date 1969-09-23
xsd:date 1969-10-13
rdf:langString Billboard
rdf:langString link
rdf:langString positive
rdf:langString Album
rdf:langString Give Me Your Love for Christmas is the third Christmas album by American pop singer Johnny Mathis and was released by Columbia Records on October 13, 1969. The oldest song selected for this project was the 1934 classic "Santa Claus Is Coming to Town", which meant there were not the traditional hymns that could be found on his previous Christmas outings. He did, however, cover several other contemporary Christmas favorites along with a few new and lesser-known songs, such as the title track, which was a reworking of an unreleased recording of his from 1961, and "Christmas Day", which came from the then-current Broadway musical Promises, Promises. New versions of "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas" and "The Little Drummer Boy", which he also recorded in 1963 for his previous Christmas LP, Sounds of Christmas, made the final track list here as well. The album debuted on Billboard magazine's Christmas Albums sales chart in the issue dated December 6, 1969, and spent one of its four weeks there at number one. It also appeared on the magazine's seasonal LP chart each year from 1970 to 1973 as well as in 1987 and 1988. On December 26, 1979, it received its first award from the Recording Industry Association of America when it reached the US sales mark of 500,000 copies necessary for Gold status. The recording of "Do You Hear What I Hear?" from this album was heard in the 1984 film Gremlins. On September 1, 2001, the album was released on compact disc for the first time, and two months later, on November 5, it was awarded Platinum certification by the RIAA for sales of one million copies in the US. The tracks from this album were also reissued as part of the 2015 Mathis compilation The Complete Christmas Collection 1958–2010, a 3-CD set on the Real Gone Music label.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 7398

data from the linked data cloud