(Christmas) the snow's coming down
(Christmas) I'm watching it fall
(Christmas) lots of people around
(Christmas) baby, please come home
(Christmas) the church bells in town
(Christmas) all ringing in song
(Christmas) full of happy sounds
(Christmas) baby, please come home
They're singing "Deck The Halls"
But it's not like Christmas at all
I remember when you were here
And all the fun we had last year
(Christmas) pretty lights on the tree
(Christmas) I'm watching 'em shine
(Christmas) you should be here with me
(Christmas) mm, baby, please come home
They're singing "Deck The Halls"
Not like Christmas at all
I remember when you were here
All the fun we had last year
(Christmas) oh, if there was a way
(Christmas) I'd hold back these tears
(Christmas) oh, but it's Christmas day
(Please)
Please
(Please)
Please
(Please) please
(Please) please
(Please) please
(Please) please (please, please)
Oh, come home
Oh, babe
You know I need you
Oh, come home (home)
(Love, love, love, love) I gotta have ya
(Love, love, love, love) you know I need you
Love (oh, love), love, love (oh, love), love
(Christmas)
Woo-hoo (love, love, love, love)
(Love, love, love, love) I gotta have ya
I sing, "Na, na-na, na, na, na-na-na-na, na-na, na-na"
It's Christmas, Christmas
Christmas, Christmas, yeah (love, love, love, love)
La, la, la, la, la, la, la (love, love, love, love)
(Love, love, love, love)
(Christmas)
About This Song
"Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)" by Michael Bublé transforms a classic holiday song into a deeply melancholic meditation on love, loss, and the profound loneliness that can accompany what's supposed to be the most joyful time of year. While Christmas imagery surrounds the narrator-snow falling, church bells ringing, festive decorations glowing-these traditional symbols of warmth and celebration become hollow reminders of absence, creating a stark emotional contrast between external joy and internal emptiness. The song captures the universal experience of how holidays can amplify feelings of isolation when someone significant is missing, turning familiar seasonal rituals into painful triggers of memory. Bublé's interpretation brings a sophisticated jazz sensibility to the arrangement, with lush orchestration and his signature smooth vocal delivery that adds layers of adult sophistication to what could have been simple holiday nostalgia. His crooning style emphasizes the yearning quality of the lyrics, making each plea feel both intimate and desperate. The production balances classic big-band elements with modern polish, creating a timeless quality that feels both vintage and contemporary. The song resonates because it acknowledges a truth many people experience during the holidays-that forced cheerfulness and communal celebration can feel alienating when you're grieving or missing someone important. Bublé's version became particularly powerful because it captured the complex emotions many adults feel during Christmas, moving beyond childhood wonder to explore the more complicated feelings that come with love, loss, and the passage of time.
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