Saturday, 20 December 2025

Home for the Holidays (There's No Place Like)

 "(There's No Place Like) Home for the Holidays" is a 1954 song commonly associated with the Christmas and holiday season. The lyrics detail the joys of being in your home community during the holidays and give examples of how some people will travel long distances to be with their loved ones. The music was composed by Robert Allen, with the lyrics written by Al Stillman

The best-known recordings of "Home for the Holidays" were made by Perry Como, who recorded the song twice, both times accompanied by Mitchell Ayres' Orchestra and the Ray Charles Singers.

The first recording of "Home for the Holidays", arranged by Joe Reisman, was made on November 16, 1954. It was released as a single for Christmas that December by RCA Victor. The flip side was "Silk Stockings" (which scored in the Cash Box magazine top 50). In the United States, "Home for the Holidays" peaked at number eight on Billboard magazine's Most Played by Jockeys chart (in the issue dated January 8, 1955) and at number 18 on Billboard's Best Sellers in Stores chart (in the issue dated January 1, 1955). The next Christmas the song was released again, with "God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen" as the flip side. The same recorded version was released in the United Kingdom by His Master's Voice, with the flip side "Tina Marie". This recording has appeared on many compilation albums over the years and remains a Christmas radio regular.

Como's second recording of "Home for the Holidays", in stereo and with a different musical arrangement by Joe Lipman, was made on July 15, 1959. It was released as a 33 rpm single, with flip side "Winter Wonderland", by RCA Victor in the U.S. and as a 45 rpm single by His Master's Voice in the UK. This 1959 version was also included on the album, Season's Greetings from Perry Como, and has appeared on many compilations, as well as being played on some radio stations during the holidays.

In 1968, Robert Goulet covered the song for his holiday album, Robert Goulet's Wonderful World Of Christmas.

Perhaps the most iconic version of the song, other than the original Perry Como version, is the Carpenters’ recording on their 1984 LP release, An Old Fashioned Christmas.

In 1987, the Muppets sang it in the ABC special, A Muppet Family Christmas.

In 1992, Joe Pass recorded a jazz guitar instrumental cover for his holiday album, Six-String Santa.

In November and December 1993, Sears aired a "Home for the Holidays" ad campaign, using instrumental renditions of the song itself.

In January 2000, a Garth Brooks version, from Garth Brooks & the Magic of Christmas, reached No. 63 on Billboard'Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart.

In 2002, singer Barry Manilow released a version of the song on his Christmas album "A Christmas Gift of Love." Manilow's version was also included on the 2003 compilation album Now That's What I Call Christmas!: The Signature Collection.

In 2010, Mandy Barnett recorded the song for her holiday album, Winter Wonderland.

On December 1, 2011, Alfonso Gomez-Rejon directed about six singing and dancing mall performances of "Home for the Holidays" by Carly Foulkes and 100 Chicago-area women in magenta dresses at the Woodfield Mall. It was used in a television commercial for T-Mobile starting on December 12. 

A 2011 duet between Cyndi Lauper and Norah Jones did well on the Billboard Adult Contemporary chart, peaking at No. 11 on the Adult Contemporary Radio Airplay Chart in the U.S.

Pentatonix covered the song for their 2021 Christmas album Evergreen.

To download the easy alphanotes sheet music, look here. Enjoy!











Saturday, 6 December 2025

There but for Fortune

 "There but for Fortune" is a song by American folk musician Phil Ochs. Ochs wrote the song in 1963 and recorded it twice, for New Folks Volume 2 (Vanguard, 1964) and Phil Ochs in Concert (Elektra, 1966). Joan Baez also recorded "There but for Fortune" in 1964, and her version of the song became a chart hit.

"There but for Fortune" consists of four verses, each one of which ends with the line "there but for fortune may go you or I". The first verse is about a prisoner. The second verse describes a hobo. The third verse is about a drunk who stumbles out of a bar. The final verse describes a country that has been bombed.

One of Ochs' biographers wrote that, "of all the songs that Phil would ever write, none would show his humanity as brilliantly as the four brief verses of 'There but for Fortune'".

The song's title was used as the name of the 1989 compilation album There but for Fortune, which featured material taken from three albums Ochs recorded for Elektra Records between 1964 and 1966. Phil Ochs: There but for Fortune was also used as the title of Michael Schumacher's 1996 biography, as well as Kenneth Bowser's 2011 documentary on the singer's life.

Ochs recorded "There but for Fortune" twice. In 1964, he recorded it for the Vanguard compilation New Folks Volume 2. The 1964 recording was reissued on the 2000 compact disc The Early Years.

In 1966, Ochs's concerts at New York's Carnegie Hall and Boston's Jordan Hall were recorded. They were released as Phil Ochs in Concert. One of the songs on In Concert was "There but for Fortune". Ochs introduces the song by sarcastically saying it was written for him by Joan Baez, since many assumed the song was written by the person who had the hit single. 

In October 1964, Baez recorded "There but for Fortune" for Joan Baez/5. It was released in the U.S. as a single in June, 1965, with "Daddy, You Been on My Mind", a Bob Dylan song, as the B-side. In July, it was released as a single in the U.K., where its B-side was "Plaisir d'amour".

The single became a Top Ten hit in the U.K., reaching #8. It was also nominated for a Grammy Award for "Best Folk Recording". In the U.S. it peaked at #50 on the Billboard chart — a good showing, but not a hit. In Canada the song reached #27.

By coincidence, Joan Baez in Concert, Part 2 became a #8 hit in the U.K. at the same time "There but for Fortune" did.

Monica Barbaro, portraying Baez in the 2024 Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown, sings the song in a concert scene. 

The Vietnam War ended on April 30, 1975, and a "War Is Over" rally was held in New York's Central Park on May 11. At the rally, Ochs and Baez sang a duet of "There but for Fortune"

"There but for Fortune" has been covered by more than a dozen performers besides Baez, including Chad and JeremyEugene ChadbourneCherThe Gretchen Phillips ExperienceJim and JeanThe Mike Leander Orchestra, Vicky Leandros (from the 1966 album "Songs und Folklore") The New Christy MinstrelsPeter, Paul and MaryThe SpokesmenFrançoise Hardy, and Sammy Walker. Peter, Paul and Mary's cover features a bridge between the third and fourth verses, containing references to hunger and children, written by Noel Paul Stookey. Also, a French version, "Où va la chance?", with lyrics adapted by Eddy Marnay, was originally performed by Françoise Hardy and later covered by Isabelle Boulay

To download the easy alphanotes sheet music, look here. Enjoy!

Lyrics:

[Verse 1]
Show me a prison, show me a jail
Show me a prison man whose face is growing pale
And I'll show you a young man with many reasons why
And there but for fortune may go you or I

[Verse 2]
Show me an alley, show me a train
Show me a hobo who sleeps out in the rain
And I'll show you a young man with many reasons why
And there but for fortune may go you or I

[Verse 3]
Show me the whiskey stains on the floor
Show me a drunken man as he stumbles out the door
And I'll show you a young man with many reasons why
And there but for fortune may go you or I

[Verse 4]
Show me the country where the bombs had to fall
Show me the ruins of the buildings once so tall
And I'll show you a young land with so many reasons why
And there but for fortune may go you or I, or I