- Jingle Bells
- Silent Night
- Christmas Choir
- The First Noel
- Christmas Bells
- White Christmas
- Santa Claus Is Coming To Town
- The Christmas Song (Merry Christmas To You)
- Pretty Snowflakes
- I Wanna Go Skating With Willie
- Where Did My Snowman Go
- The Mama Doll Song
- Boogie Woogie Santa Claus
The best-selling female singer during the 1950s, Patti Page
in many ways defined the decade of earnest, novelty-ridden adult pop
with throwaway hits like "The Doggie in the Window" and "I Went to Your
Wedding." By singing a wide range of popular material and her own share
of novelty fluff, she proved easily susceptible to the fall of classic
adult pop but remained a chart force into the mid-'60s.
Born Clara Ann Fowler
in Muskogee, OK, she began singing professionally at a radio station in
Tulsa and took weekend gigs on the side. (After being billed as Patti Page for a program sponsored by Page Milk, she decided to take the name even after leaving.) Page toured the country with a band led by Jimmy Joy and ended up in Chicago by 1947, where she sang in a small-group outing by Benny Goodman
and gained a recording contract with Mercury. Her first hit, "Confess,"
came that same year and made her the first pop artist to overdub
harmony vocals onto her own lead. After a few more successes, Page
gained her first million-seller in 1950 for "With My Eyes Wide Open I'm
Dreaming," which cashed in on the novelty effect of overdubbing (the
added touch came with listing it as "the Patti Page
Quartet"). Also in 1950, "All My Love" became her first number one hit
and spent several weeks at the top. That same year produced the biggest
hit of her career, "The Tennessee Waltz." Notched at number one for
months, it eventually became one of the best-selling singles of all time
and prompted no less than six Top 40 covers during the following year.
During 1952-1953, Patti Page
scored two more huge hits with "I Went to Your Wedding" and "The Doggie
in the Window," both of which spent more than two months at number one.
She gained her own television program, The Patti Page Show, in 1955 and
moved into full-lengths with In the Land of Hi Fi and Manhattan Tower. Page
also proved more resilient to the rise of rock & roll than most of
her contemporaries, hitting big in 1956 with "Allegheny Moon" and "Old
Cape Cod" the next year. Indeed, she kept reaching the charts (if only
in moderate placings) throughout the '60s, paced by the Top Ten theme to
the film Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte in 1965. Though she stopped
recording for the most part in 1968, she continued performing into the
'90s.
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