Santa Baby

Album: Kylie Christmas (2000)
Charted: 31
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Songfacts®:

  • Of the many oddities that populate the holiday songbook, few are as recognizable as "Santa Baby." Written by Joan Javits and Philip Springer, this gleefully materialistic tune first sashayed onto the scene on October 5, 1953, when Eartha Kitt recorded it with Henri René and His Orchestra. Kitt's sultry performance turned the song into the best-selling Christmas number of that year in the United States, cementing its place as a festive classic.
  • Over the decades, an impressive roster of artists has covered "Santa Baby," each adding their own brand of sass and sparkle. There's Madonna, Taylor Swift, Ariana Grande, and Laufey, to name but a few. Among this glittering lineup, Kylie Minogue's version stands out as a particularly successful version.
  • Minogue first recorded "Santa Baby" in 2000, releasing it as a promotional single in the UK just in time for the holiday season. True to the cheeky spirit of Kitt's original, her rendition is a flirty confection that Billboard later praised for capturing the "cheekiness" of the classic. Though initially a festive trifle tucked into a couple of EPs - A Kylie Christmas and A Christmas Gift - the track found a permanent home on Minogue's 2015 album, Kylie Christmas.

    And then something extraordinary happened. Nearly two decades after its original release, Minogue's "Santa Baby" became a hit. In 2017, it climbed to #38 on the UK chart during the holiday season. By 2021, it reached a new peak at #31, cementing her version as a perennial favorite. Even more impressive, it became the most-streamed song of Minogue's entire career in the UK, eclipsing her iconic million-seller "Can't Get You Out Of My Head."
  • Minogue sang "Santa Baby" live for the first time in December 1999 when she performed for the troops at the Concert for the Interfet Troops in East Timor. Dressed in a flowing satin gown that complemented the song's flirtatious lyrics, Minogue delivered a performance that brought a touch of glamour to the humid Timor evening.

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