Every week, Talking Points gives you a worksheet to practise your reading comprehension with exercises about the story we’ve written.
Artists release new holiday songs every year. Still, radio stations and shopping malls keep returning to the same classics, like “Jingle Bells” or “All I Want for Christmas Is You”, by Mariah Carey.
This is because classic holiday songs can be powerful cues for the memories and traditions associated with this time of year.
“People often say that it doesn’t feel like Christmas until they hear a particular song. It is very similar to when someone says it doesn’t feel like their birthday until they have blown out the candles on their [cake],” Lolita Schmalenberg said. She is a teen and adult therapist at Lifespan Counselling.
People crave patterns and predictability. These songs signal to our brain that we are about to repeat a familiar set of behaviours associated with the winter holiday.
They remind us of the predictable activities to come, like seeing certain relatives, going to parties or eating traditional holiday food.

Music and memory
A 2022 study published in the Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition suggests that music can help us recall more positive memories than other emotional cues, like sounds or words. This can happen even when the music itself is sad or angry.
We also tend to listen to our favourite songs more often than we re-watch films or reread books. This repeated exposure becomes a stronger trigger for memories.
Classic Christmas songs can feel deeply ingrained in our memories because we hear them every year: “We hear them so often, in so many places, every single year, that our brains memorise them very well. Sometimes you may even find yourself humming along unconsciously,” Schmalenberg said.
In addition, we are most likely to listen to music when our minds have time to wander. This means that music can be a powerful trigger for involuntary memory. It is a memory that simply “pops” into a person’s head, even if they are not actively searching for it.

Making a holiday hit
The memories and meanings a person associates with a song can change the effect it has on them, Schmalenberg explained.
For younger generations, hearing US singer Bing Crosby’s 1942 hit “White Christmas” might not have a strong impact. But a newer song by a popular current artist, such as Ariana Grande’s 2014 single, “Santa Tell Me”, could remind them of a personal experience.
This is where our brain chemicals come in. Dopamine and serotonin shape how we emotionally react to music and holiday memories.
Dopamine gives us a sudden burst of pleasure when we hear our favourite song. This feeling is part of the brain’s reward system and makes us want to keep listening.
Meanwhile, serotonin is responsible for the deeper feelings of joy and satisfaction we get when making happy memories while listening to festive music.
Be it “All I Want for Christmas Is You”, which was released in 1994, or Gene Autry’s “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” from 1949, a song needs to be catchy and have upbeat lyrics to become a timeless hit.
Popular themes typically include love and new romance during the holiday season; the magic of the outdoors and snow; cosy, warm moments with friends and family and delicious festive food.
“That’s what a popular hit tends to focus on. Plus, you need a good chorus that everyone can sing along to,” Schmalenberg said.




