Christmas Tree Farm
"Christmas Tree Farm" | ||||
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Single by Taylor Swift | ||||
Written | December 1, 2019 | |||
Released | December 6, 2019 | |||
Recorded | December 2–3, 2019 | |||
Studio | London Lane Studios (London) | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 3:47 | |||
Label | Republic | |||
Songwriter(s) | Taylor Swift | |||
Producer(s) |
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Taylor Swift singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Christmas Tree Farm" on YouTube |
"Christmas Tree Farm" is a Christmas song written and recorded by the American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift. She wrote the song on December 1, 2019, inspired by her affection for the holiday season, and produced it with Jimmy Napes; Republic Records released it to US radio on December 6 of that year. Opening with a 1950-inspired jazzy intro, "Christmas Tree Farm" is a pop song driven by an upbeat arrangement, orchestral treatment, jingle bells, and lyrics on childhood memories of Christmas.
Music critics praised the song for its catchy tune and nostalgic lyricism; they have retrospectively regarded it as one of the best Christmas songs. "Christmas Tree Farm" reached number 59 on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart and the top 30 on the national charts of Croatia, Flanders, Hungary, and Scotland. It was certified silver in the United Kingdom and gold in Australia.
Directed and produced by Swift, the music video for "Christmas Tree Farm" features childhood home footage of her and her family. She performed the song live in 2019 at the Jingle Bell Ball in London and the iHeartRadio Jingle Ball in New York City; the live version from the latter was released to digital music platforms in December 2020. An "Old Timey Version" of the track, in which the orchestral accompaniment is more emphasized along with re-recorded vocals, was released to US radio in November 2021.
Background and release
[edit]Having grown up in Pine Ridge Farm, a Christmas tree farm in Wyomissing, Pennsylvania, Taylor Swift expressed her love for the holiday season and that she wishes "it was all year round". She stated that she helped her dad manage the farm during her childhood and that the environment influenced her affection for the season.[1][2][3] She released her first Christmas album, The Taylor Swift Holiday Collection, on October 14, 2007, which peaked atop the US Top Holiday Albums chart. The album includes six tracks: four cover versions of Christmas classics and two original tracks co-written by Swift.[4][5] Swift revisited Pine Ridge Farm in July 2018 and said that she felt particularly emotional upon entering her childhood bedroom.[6] She referenced the farm in the music video for her single "Me!", released in April 2019.[7][8]
Swift wrote, recorded, and released "Christmas Tree Farm" in under six days.[9] She wrote the song on piano on December 1, 2019, before recording her vocals and producing the track with the English producer Jimmy Napes the following day. On December 3, a group of choral singers provided the background vocals.[10][11] Swift announced the track on Good Morning America on December 5, before it was released at midnight Eastern Standard Time (UTC−05:00) by Republic Records for digital download and streaming, and to US contemporary hit, hot adult contemporary, modern adult contemporary, and adult contemporary radio.[10][12][13] It marked the third original Christmas song in her discography.[14][15] A behind-the-scenes video that features the three-day creation process of "Christmas Tree Farm" was released on December 23, 2019.[11]
On November 22, 2021, Swift announced a re-recorded "Old Timey Version" of the track on Good Morning America, released on the same day as an Amazon Music exclusive.[16][17] A behind-the-scenes video showcasing the process of making the song accompanied its release.[16] "Christmas Tree Farm (Old Timey Version)" was sent to hot adult contemporary, modern adult contemporary, and adult contemporary radio on November 29, 2021;[13] it was released to all streaming platforms on November 23, 2022.[18] A collection containing the original song, the re-recorded version, and a live recording at iHeartRadio's 2019 Jingle Ball was released in November 2024.[2] The cover artwork for the collection features a photo of a young Swift smiling while she holds her pet dog, taken at Pine Ridge Farm. The song's title and her name are written in a garland-style that resembled a friendship bracelet.[2][3]
Production and composition
[edit]Swift produced "Christmas Tree Farm" with Napes, who provided background vocals and played piano on it.[10][19] Gus Pirelli played moog bass and recorded the track at London Lane Studios in the United Kingdom, assisted by Jamie McEvoy, Joseph Wander, and Will Purton. Serban Ghenea mixed it, with John Hanes serving as the mix engineer. Simon Hale conducted the string arrangement, and Lawrence Johnson worked as the vocal arranger.[19] The re-recorded "Old Timey Version" was produced by Napes, arranged by Hale, and recorded by Chris Bolster at Abbey Road Studios in London with assistance from Neil Dawes and Daniel Hayden.[20]
Musicians who played instruments for the original version include Camille (violin); Bruce White (viola), Jodi Milliner (bass guitar), Ian Burdge (cello), Chris Laurence (double bass), and Ash Soan (drums); John Thurgood, Laurence Davies, and Martin Owen played French horn.[19] Several singers provided choral background vocals, including Candice-Mimi Otohwo, Destinee Knight-Scott, Glenn Tatenda Gwazai, Jessica Mae Obioha, Lorrain Briscoe, Margeaux Michelle, Paul Lee, Tarna Renae Johnson, Tehillah Daniel, The LJ Singers, Travis J Cole, Wayne Hernandez, and Wendi Rose.[11][19]
"Christmas Tree Farm is 3 minutes and 47 seconds long.[12] Music journalists identified it as a Christmas-themed-pop song and a sentimental ballad that features an upbeat arrangement, an uptempo rhythm, and 1960s music influences.[a] It begins with a jazzy intro showcasing 1950s-inspired strings, which was compared to the work of Nat King Cole and Karen Carpenter by The A.V. Club's Gwen Ihnat.[24] The song then transitions into the main upbeat pop part, featuring jingle bell percussion; it evokes the music of Mariah Carey and Phil Spector, according to The New York Times' Jon Pareles and Vulture's Nate Jones.[24][25][26] Parade's Jessica Sager likened the composition of "Christmas Tree Farm" to the songs on Spector's album A Christmas Gift for You from Phil Spector (1963).[27] Ihnat and NME's Hannah Mylrea considered it a return to Swift's country music roots.[28][29] Featuring a new arrangement and a 70-piece orchestra,[20] the "Old Timey Version" incorporates horns, strings, and muted jingle bells along with elements of swing music.[30][31][18]
The lyrics recall Swift's nostalgic childhood memories from an adult perspective.[24][32] In the intro, Swift expresses her stress amid the chaotic nature of the holiday season, before she closes her eyes and envisions being in a different place; "My winter nights are taken up by static/ Stress, holiday shopping, traffic/ Then I close my eyes and I'm somewhere else/ Just like magic".[33] She wishes to visit the Christmas tree farm in her heart and depicts a fanciful scene; "In my heart is a Christmas tree farm/ Where the people would come/ To dance under sparkling lights/ Bundled up in their mittens and coats/ And the cider would flow/ And I just wanna be there tonight".[34][35] Swift sings in the hook to her lover, "Everything is icy and blue/ And you would be there too", before admitting in the chorus, "I love you/ Just being in your arms/ Takes me back to that little farm/ Where every wish comes true".[24][33]
Critical reception
[edit]Music critics praised the memorable tune of "Christmas Tree Farm" and its nostalgic nature. Jane Song from Paste dubbed it "twinkly, fresh, and happy",[36] and Mylrea thought that it captured "everything that's great about a Christmas song"–an upbeat tune, a cozy feeling, and a soothing nature.[37] She wrote that although the track was overly sentimental, it succeeded in the context of using the holiday season to reflect Swift's childhood memories.[28] Time Out's Liv Kelly similarly lauded Swift's tribute to her childhood home and the "charmingly juvenile nostalgia" of the song.[38] Bria McNeal from Esquire described the track as "dazzling" and added that it became her favorite Christmas song after discovering it in 2024.[39] Several critics praised the song as catchy, with Annie Zaleski of Salon.com and Glenn Rowley of Billboard dubbing it an "earworm".[40][23][41]
Some critics commented on the production and the vocals. Variety's Chris Willman said that the heavy orchestration and rich production of "Christmas Tree Farm" resulted in "maximum holiday glee",[10] and Ihnat praised the song's "irrepressible" hook and described Swift's vocals as angelic.[24] American Songwriter's Alex Hopper said that best part of the song was the bridge ("And when I'm feelin' alone / You remind me of home / oh, baby, baby, Merry Christmas") and considered the track one of the five most underrated Christmas songs.[42] "Christmas Tree Farm" appeared in rankings of Swift's discography by Song (72 out of 158),[36] Mylrea (84 out of 161),[28] Jones (185 out of 245),[26] and Rolling Stone's Rob Sheffield (203 out of 274).[43]
Rankings
[edit]Several publications listed "Christmas Tree Farm" in their lists of the best Christmas songs. Billboard ranked it as the eighth best Christmas song of the 21st century,[44] and The A.V. Club included it on its list of the 18 best Christmas songs of the 2010s decade.[24] In 2019, British GQ and NME considered it one of the best newly released Christmas songs.[32][37] Time Out named "Christmas Tree Farm" the 14th best Christmas song of all time,[38] while Cosmopolitan picked it as the 45th best.[45] The track was included in unranked lists by Entertainment Weekly,[29] Esquire,[39] and PinkNews.[40]
Publication | List | Rank | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
Billboard | The 25 Best Christmas Songs of the 21st Century (2024) | 8
|
|
Cosmopolitan | The 80 Best Christmas Songs of All Time (2024) | 45
|
|
Glamour | The 55 Best Christmas Songs (2022) | 53
|
|
Parade | The 200 Best Christmas Songs of All Time (2023) | 76
|
|
Time Out | The 50 Best Christmas Songs of All Time (2024) | 14
|
Commercial performance
[edit]"Christmas Tree Farm" debuted at number 147 on the Billboard Global 200 chart on the week ending January 2, 2021, before peaking at number 102 in January 2024.[47][48] In the United States, it accumulated 7.7 million streams and sold 26,000 digital downloads in its opening week, debuting at number two on the Digital Songs chart dated December 12, 2019. The song marked Swift's 49th top-ten song on the chart, extending her all-time record.[49] On the week ending December 14, 2019, it debuted at number 25 on the Adult Contemporary chart, before peaking at number three in its third week.[49][50] The song debuted at number 59 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart dated December 21, 2019, becoming Swift's 96th entry on the chart.[49] It additionally reached number 19 on the Holiday 100 chart,[51] number 40 on the Adult Pop Airplay chart,[52] and number 65 on the Rolling Stone Top 100 chart.[53]
In the United Kingdom, "Christmas Tree Farm" debuted at number 71 in December 2019,[54] before peaking at number 44 in December 2021.[55] It additionally reached number 13 in Croatia,[56] number 16 in Scotland,[57] number 23 in Flanders,[58] number 29 in Hungary,[59] number 40 in Canada,[60] number 49 in Australia,[61] and number 51 in Ireland.[62] "Christmas Tree Farm" was certified silver in the United Kingdom by the British Phonographic Industry and gold in Australia by the Australian Recording Industry Association.[63][64]
The re-recorded "Christmas Tree Farm (Old Timey Version)" reached number 98 on the Billboard Global 200 chart dated January 1, 2022.[65] In the United States, it peaked at number 22 on the Adult Contemporary chart,[66] number 46 on the Holiday 100 chart,[67] and number 62 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart.[68] "Christmas Tree Farm (Old Timey Version)" reached number 84 on the national chart of Sweden in the last week of 2023.[69]
Music video
[edit]Swift announced the music video for "Christmas Tree Farm" via her social media on December 5, 2019.[34][70] It aired on Good Morning America on the morning of the following day, and it was released digitally along with a lyric video.[71][72] Directed and produced by Swift,[10][73][74] the video features childhood home footage of her and her family, filmed at Pine Ridge Farm.[9][75] It captures them sledding, sitting on Santa's lap, playing in the snow, and gathering by a Christmas tree.[9][34] The video includes a clip of Swift joyfully unwrapping a present containing her first acoustic guitar on a Christmas morning; People's Melody Chiu described it as the video's "most heartwarming moment".[9][15] It additionally contains footage from different phases of her childhood, including clips of the farm just days before her birth, and transitions to different areas of the farm, showcasing stockings placed by the fireplace, numerous Christmas lights decorated around the home, and her pet dog playing in the garden.[34][33]
Live performances
[edit]Swift performed "Christmas Tree Farm" for the first time at the Jingle Bell Ball on December 8, 2019, in a white belted playsuit with a Santa hat and thigh-high boots. Footage of her childhood and falling snowflakes appeared in the background throughout the performance.[76][77] On December 13, Swift celebrated her birthday after reprising her performance at Madison Square Garden as part of the iHeartRadio Jingle Ball.[78] She donned a sequin gold dress along with matching knee-high boots for the performance,[79] which featured "Beach Boys-y harmonies and a Wall of Sound arrangement".[80] Rolling Stone's Patrick Doyle commended Swift's singing in the iHeartRadio Jingle Ball performance, particularly highlighting her vocals during the chorus.[80] The performance was recorded and released digitally on December 19, 2020.[81]
Credits and personnel
[edit]Credits are adapted from Qobuz.[19]
- Taylor Swift – vocals, songwriter, producer
- Jimmy Napes – producer, background vocals, piano
- Serban Ghenea – mixer
- John Hanes – mix engineer
- Gus Pirelli – recording engineer, moog bass
- Jamie McEvoy – assistant recording engineer
- Joseph Wander – assistant recording engineer
- Will Purton – assistant recording engineer
- Camille – violin
- Bruce White – viola
- Jodi Milliner – bass guitar
- Ian Burdge – cello
- Chris Laurence – double bass
- Ash Soan – drums
- John Thurgood, Laurence Davies, Martin Owen – French horn
- Simon Hale – string arranger
- Lawrence Johnson – vocal arranger
- Candice-Mimi Otohwo, Destinee Knight-Scott, Glenn Tatenda Gwazai, Jessica Mae Obioha, Lorrain Briscoe, Margeaux Michelle, Paul Lee, Tarna Renae Johnson, Tehillah Daniel, The LJ Singers, Travis J Cole, Wayne Hernandez, Wendi Rose – background vocals
Charts
[edit]Chart (2019–2024) | Peak position |
---|---|
Australia (ARIA)[61] | 49 |
Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40)[82] | 50 |
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[58] | 23 |
Canada (Canadian Hot 100)[60] | 40 |
Canada AC (Billboard)[83] | 8 |
Canada CHR/Top 40 (Billboard)[84] | 49 |
Canada Hot AC (Billboard)[85] | 35 |
Croatia (HRT)[56] | 13 |
Euro Digital Song Sales (Billboard)[86] | 16 |
France (SNEP)[87] | 96 |
Germany (GfK)[88] | 60 |
Global 200 (Billboard)[48] | 102 |
Hungary (Single Top 40)[59] | 29 |
Ireland (IRMA)[62] | 51 |
Netherlands (Single Tip)[89] | 1 |
New Zealand Hot Singles (RMNZ)[90] | 9 |
Scotland (OCC)[57] | 16 |
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[91] | 83 |
Sweden Heatseeker (Sverigetopplistan)[92] | 8 |
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[93] | 93 |
UK Singles (OCC)[55] | 44 |
US Billboard Hot 100[94] | 59 |
US Adult Contemporary (Billboard)[50] | 3 |
US Adult Pop Airplay (Billboard)[52] | 40 |
US Holiday 100 (Billboard)[51] | 19 |
US Rolling Stone Top 100[53] | 65 |
Chart (2021–2022) | Peak position |
---|---|
Global 200 (Billboard)[65] | 98 |
Sweden (Sverigetopplistan)[69] | 84 |
US Adult Contemporary (Billboard)[66] | 22 |
US Billboard Hot 100[68] | 62 |
US Holiday 100 (Billboard)[67] | 46 |
Certifications
[edit]Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
Australia (ARIA)[64] | Gold | 35,000‡ |
United Kingdom (BPI)[63] | Silver | 200,000‡ |
‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone. |
Release history
[edit]Country | Date | Version | Format | Label | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
United States | December 6, 2019 | Original | Republic | [13] | |
Various | [12] | ||||
November 27, 2020 | Picture disc | [95] | |||
December 19, 2020 | Live at the 2019 iHeartRadio Jingle Ball |
|
[81] | ||
November 22, 2021 | Old Timey Version |
|
[16] | ||
United States | November 29, 2021 |
|
[13] | ||
Various | November 23, 2022 |
|
[96] | ||
Italy | December 13, 2024 | Original | Radio airplay | Island | [97] |
See also
[edit]- "The Best Day" (2008) and "Seven" (2020) – other Swift songs discussing her infanthood
Footnote
[edit]- ^ Attributed to Consequence's Abby Jones,[16] The Tennessean's Matthew Leimkuehler,[21] People's Andrea Wurzburger,[22] and Billboard's Glenn Rowley.[23]
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