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Alex B Cann weekly column - 28th November

Who is going to be this year's Christmas number one? The race is on, and the smart money is on Mariah Carey...but who else could it be? Alex looks at the contenders for the 2024 crown!

The race is on for this year's coveted festive chart topper! There has been much debate about when we should start playing Christmas songs on Tameside Radio, and I have to confess I led the way in deciding to open the box of tinsel topped box of delights a few days earlier than planned. Others said wait until 1st December, but with Wham already in the top five, it seems the public have spoken! I do feel a little sorry for those who work in retail, though, and can't get away from ubiquitous Wizzard, Shaky, Mud and Mariah for the next few weeks. And that's before taking into account rude customers who have loud conversations into their mobile phones at the till, barge folk out of the way, and are just generally not very nice humans.

Anyway, back to the Christmas chart. I used to write down the Top 40 in a notepad every week, and wherever I was on a Sunday afternoon, I'd stop it to listen to Kid Jensen or Bruno Brookes counting them down. I even taped my favourites off the radio, and tried to press pause before the disc jockey spoke at the end of the tracks.

As for the hit parade this year, I would quite like to see Mariah Carey finally make it to the summit with her cheery ditty All I Want For Christmas Is You. It may have been played to death in the last 30 years, but I think it's a bit of a travesty that East 17 left her with the silver medal in 1994. Another interesting horse that's entered the race is ELO's Mr Blue Sky, as 'Rage Against The Machine Christmas Number 1' campaigner Jon Morter aims to promote the social media platform Bluesky as an alternative to Elon Musk's X, formerly known as Twitter (when it was good). It would also be a fitting tribute to ELO's rich musical legacy ahead of their fareful tour, which arrives at Co-op Live in Manchester in July 2025. The news of the song joining the race was announced on the Official Charts Bluesky channel earlier this week. Mr Blue Sky originally peaked at number six back in 1978, so I'd be more than happy to see it reach number one. Jon Morter is the guy who helped Rage Against The Machine's Killing In The Name become an unlikely yuletide chart topper in 2009, denying Joe McElderry the top spot with The Climb. He also played a part in getting the Justice Collective to the top in 2012, raising money for victims of the Hillsborough disaster and their families.

After X Factor domination and sausage roll madness for a few years, it seems to be quite an open field in 2024. Admittedly, the chart isn't the giant it once was, and most Generation X'ers my age will often tell me they have no idea what's even in the chart any more. I follow it pretty closely, and believe it's been a really good year for music. Don't believe those who say nothing good has been released!

Another contender for the turkey crown this year, announced on Friday 20th December, include Band Aid 40, which has attracted some headlines with the news that Ed Sheeran is not too happy at being included. Reports suggest Bob Geldof would like to meet him for a chat. I'd love to be a fly on the wall for that one! Wham could do it again, after finally getting to number one in the Christmas chart of 2023, whilst Liam Payne's All I Want (For Christmas) could be sent to the top posthumously by fans grieving him following his tragic death in Argentina earlier this year.

Tom Grennan has released It Can't Be Christmas, but only on Amazon Music, so that could be a little bit of an outsider. It's very good though, as is his current single Higher which we are playing on Tameside Radio. Other possibilities include Oasis with their cover of Slade's Christmas classic, a One Direction re-release, Ed Sheeran's Under The Tree (from the Netflix film 'That Christmas'), or perhaps Jedward, who are releasing LOVEmas. They've described it on Instagram as "a song with a mission to share the love this festive season", and includes such lyrical poetry as "the Christmas dinner's Hot to Go, Santa's singing espresso". Before you rule it out, remember Mr Blobby beat Take That in 1993. Where's Cliff? Has he given up?! Time will tell who triumphs.

More from Alex Cann's Weekly Blog

  • Modern Christmas songs, films, and mushroom coffee...Alex B Cann Colum 4th December 2025

    Welcome to the party, pal! Die Hard has been the subject of a great deal of heated debate in our office this week, as we try and work out if it should be classed as a Christmas film or not. A poll for the British Board of Film Classification has found that a sizeable 44 per cent said the Bruce Willis 1988 action classic should not be classified as a Christmas film, despite it being set at Christmas, and essentially being about a man trying to get home to see his family on Christmas Eve. 44 per cent are wrong, in my firm opinion. Yippee ki-yay.

  • Alex B Cann column - 27th November

    When was the last time you had a proper belly laugh? The lovely folk at Cartoon Network have come up with a top ten list of the things that make us laugh the most, and you know I'm a sucker for a light hearted chart. I have to say WhatsApp chats with my friends do provide frequent laughs, but a lot of the news cycle these days is pure doom and gloom. Perhaps the 'and finally' quirky story at the end of the bulletin needs to make a comeback, especially having just endured weeks of budget speculation and so-called 'kite flying'.. Social media can be an angry place too, as I've written in the pas

  • Alex Cann - Thursday 20th November - Festive feasts and words of the year

    With predictions of stealth tax rises an lots of games of 'kite flying', where policies are floated in the newspapers to ascertain public reaction, the budget is now less than a week away. The level of speculation has been off the scale, and whilst few people say they would love to pay more tax, something has to change to make up the shortfall

  • Alex Cann's weekly blog - 9th January

    It was tempting to write something this week about the digital darts being fired from the keyboard of the world's richest man, and how it might be better if we just switched social media off for a bit, but for the sake of my blood pressure, I thought I'd share the first part of a musical Top 10 with you.

  • Alex's Weekly Blog - 31st October

    Back in March, celebrity chef Hugh Fearnley -Whittingstall clashed with the health secretary at the time, Victoria Atkins, over what he claimed was the government's failure to tackle the obesity crisis. Measures such as limits on special offers and banning junk food adverts before 9pm were kicked into the long grass until at least October 2025. Separately, reports have suggested that the pandemic made obesity rates significantly worse among children, as unhealthy eating habits and a lack of exercise became the norm.

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