Trivium: The 3 Classical Liberal Arts of Language
Amazon / iStock

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Trivium: The 3 Classical Liberal Arts of Language
Amazon / iStock
The Field Museum Is Launching a Beer Based on Its T. rex, Sue
Nimesh M via Wikimedia Commons // CC BY-SA 2.0
Will My Phone’s Battery Go On the Fritz in the Freezing Cold?
Today’s Big Question: Will my phone’s battery go on the fritz in the freezing cold?
Gingerbread houses have some surprising connections to royalty, brutal fairy tales, and global trade. Here’s the origin story of the festive confectionery construction.
10 Smart Ways to Lower Your Heating Bill This Winter
Lower your heat bill this winter by trying these 10 tips. (No, piling on the sweaters and blankets is not among the list.)
The Shortest Route for Seeing Nearly 50,000 Historic Places in One Trip
This is the shortest route for seeing nearly 50,000 historic places in one trip.
23 Surprising Facts About Love Actually
Love Actually, the romantic comedy directed by Richard Curtis and commonly revisited during the holidays, initially contained 14 love stories. Four, however, were cut between the scripting phase and post-production. Here are 22 other facts about the intertwining tale of love and loss in London.
A female doctor from Brazil, after being fed up from burglars jumping over her fence and steal her belongings, tapped dozen of HIV-infected syringes atop her metal fence with a warning board saying, ”Wall with HIV positive blood. No trespassing.” 10
The holiday season is the most nostalgic time of year, so it only makes sense that the most popular Christmas songs are from the 1940s and ’50s. To really put a retro spin on the season, we gathered up 15 songs from even earlier—the ’10s, ’20s, and ’30s. And while they might not be coming directly out of a record player, they’re sure to put you in a very merry sepia-tinted mood.
Perhaps the most traditional song on this list, its performers—the Edison Mixed Quartet (also sometimes referred to as the Edison Concert Band)—also recorded a few similar-sounding Christmas tunes during the early 20th century.
OK, this isn’t a song—but we just had to include this 1922 bit that does end with a rendition of “Jingle Bells.”
If you’re a music lover, you know (and love) Bessie Smith, but you might not have heard this holiday track, which combines Smith’s soaring vocals with delightfully jazzy horns and piano.
We’ve included a few blues tracks here, because, hey: the holidays are the best time to be cheerful—and depressed.
Vernon Dalhart was an important figure in the early days of American folk and country music—even with a background in opera. He auditioned for Thomas Edison and, over the course of several years, recorded hundreds of songs for Edison Records under a number of pseudonyms. After that, Dalhart began to record country songs, becoming a household name with 1924’s “The Wreck of the Old 97.”
If the name didn’t tip you off, here’s another blues track. And if you find yourself in need of more, click on over here, here, here, here, here, and here. Yes, there are a surprising number of great blues songs about the holidays, and these somber tunes will definitely bring you joy.
While the Christmas music of the ’40s and ’50s would start to make its way into the studio, much of the earlier music of the holidays still had that live, big band sound—including this 1930 recording.
This is the kind of song you might expect to hear in a Christmas special for kids (which is a total compliment).
A very cheeky song honoring the age-old question you’ve never thought to ask: “Does Santa Claus sleep with his whiskers over or under the sheet?”
An instrumental track that’s perfect for you if orchestra swells are what really get you in the holiday spirit.
“Swingin” might actually be the best way to describe this 1936 jazz carol.
This song is sometimes listed as “What Will Santa Claus Say? (When He Finds Everybody Swingin’),” which is a pretty fun image to conjure if you ask us.
This 1936 Christmas song sounds a bit like a scene out of an old Disney movie—and tells the tale of all the little girls who dream of being the fairy on top of the tree. (It’s OK, we’ve never had that dream either.)
Before “All I Want For Christmas Is You,” there was “I Want You For Christmas.”
Don’t let that creepy preview image above fool you: This 1939 song is a sweet ode to all the things we already have (with some not-so-subtle nods to the turmoil happening around the world at the time).
December 13, 2016 – 8:00am
Questions: | 5 |
Available: | Always |
Pass rate: | 75 % |
Backwards navigation: | Forbidden |
“Sho”veling Snow
Monday, December 12, 2016 – 11:26