In 1981, ZE Records asked each of its artists to record a Christmas song for a compilation album, A Christmas Record. The Waitresses were in the middle of a difficult tour and the Christmas song commission was "the last thing we wanted", Butler said later.[3][4]
Butler wrote the song that August, assembling it from assorted unused riffs.[5] He finished the lyrics in a taxi on the way to the recording studio,[6]Electric Lady Studios in Greenwich Village.[7] Butler said the lyrics came from his hatred of Christmas: "Everybody I knew in New York was running around like a bunch of fiends. It wasn't about joy. It was something to cope with."[5] The bassist, Tracy Wormworth, was inspired by Bernard Edwards' bassline on the recently released "Good Times" by Chic.[6]
Written while hip hop music was beginning to gain prominence, "Christmas Wrapping" is "almost rapped" by Donahue.[5] Its title, a pun on "rapping",[8] alludes to the 1979 song "Christmas Rappin'" by Kurtis Blow.[9] Butler said he also "liked the idea of the word 'wrap,' like a wraparound, because the story is circular".[9]
Lyrics
"Christmas Wrapping" is told from the perspective of an unpartnered woman, who was determined not to participate in the exhausting holiday season after a year that was so busy, she has been unable to go on a date with an appealing gentleman she met months ago. Preparing to dine alone on Christmas Eve, she runs into the fellow in a grocery store, bringing "the year to a very happy ending".[10]
Release
"Christmas Wrapping" was released as a single in the UK in 1981 on Island Records. It did not initially make the charts, but was reissued in 1982 and reached No. 45 on the UK Singles Chart that December.[11] It remains the Waitresses' highest-charting single in the UK.[12]
Butler said the reception was a rejuvenating gift for the band: "We do the Christmas song, forget about it and go back on the road. The next thing I know when calling back to New York is that it's all over the radio and much to our surprise it leaps over our heads and hits all the cities where we're heading and all of a sudden we're back on an upswing again."[3]
Legacy
In 2005, Guardian journalist Dorian Lynskey called the song "fizzing, funky dance-around-the-Christmas-tree music for Brooklyn hipsters".[13] In 2012, the Daily Telegraph writer Bernadette McNulty called it "one of the most charming, insouciant festive songs ever".[8] The AllMusic reviewer Andy Hinds called it "one of the best holiday pop tunes ever recorded".[1]
During the 2016 Christmas season, it re-entered the singles chart at number 96.[12]
Each festive season, Butler makes a donation to the Akron-Summit County children's library in the name of the first person to tell him they heard "Christmas Wrapping" on the radio.[6]
Sinkane, studying a Masters in composition, produced a cover for Christmas 2020. It featured Nancy Whang (LCD Soundsystem) singing lead, Nick Millhiser (Holy Ghost!) on drums, and Money Mark (The Beastie Boys) on Moog.[31] Profits from this release went to The Food Bank for New York City.
^ abChristmas Wrapping (UK 7" Vinyl liner notes). The Waitresses. ZE Records. 1982. WIP 6821.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
^Christmas Wrapping (UK 12" Vinyl liner notes). The Waitresses. ZE Records. 1983. ZEREC.EP59.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
^Christmas Wrapping (FRA CD Single liner notes). The Waitresses. ZE Records. 2016. ZEREC.EP59.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)