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I Want to Come Home for Christmas

"I Want to Come Home for Christmas"
Single by Marvin Gaye
from the album The Marvin Gaye Collection
Released 1972
Recorded 1972, Hitsville West, Los Angeles
Genre Soul, R&B, doo-wop
Length 3:31 (single version)
4:44 (full version)
Label Tamla
Songwriter(s) Marvin Gaye
Forest Hairston
Producer(s) Marvin Gaye
Marvin Gaye singles chronology
"Trouble Man"
(1972)
"I Want to Come Home for Christmas"
(1972)
"Let's Get It On"
(1973)
"Trouble Man"
(1972)
"I Want to Come Home for Christmas"
(1972)
"Let's Get It On"
(1973)

"I Want to Come Home for Christmas" is a holiday song recorded by Marvin Gaye in 1972. The song was co-written by Gaye and Forest Hairston and was released on a posthumous Marvin compilation titled, The Marvin Gaye Collection 18 years later.

The idea of the song came to Forest Hairston after seeing pictures of people tying yellow ribbons around trees for Vietnam War troops who were forced to be prisoners of war or P.O.W. Hairston hadn't finished writing the song when Marvin Gaye, who he had become friends with, happened to stop by his house. When Gaye asked Hairston what he was working on, he said he was "messing with a song" in tribute to the Vietnam troops. Gaye had mentioned to Hairston that he wanted to have a holiday song of his own and asked Hairston to play him a bit of it. Gaye stopped him mid-track and began to work more on the track with him, adding in melody and harmony parts.

Gaye later took Hairston's track and went to the Motown Recording Studios in Los Angeles, otherwise known as Hitsville West, and produced the track himself. Gaye finished the recording in one take and after it was recorded on tape, returned to Hairston's apartment and slipped the tape in Hairston's recorder. When Hairston heard it, he immediately hugged Gaye complimenting his talents, to which Gaye laughed.

Gaye struggled to get the song released as a single for Vietnam troops with Motown.Eighteen years after its recording and six years after Gaye's untimely death, the song was reissued on The Marvin Gaye Collection. It also appeared as a bonus track on a later reissue of the compilation A Motown Christmas. Hairston would recall he received a royalty check from the song a few years later after the album's release. Later evaluation of the song by critics labeled it as a "masterpiece". Ever since 1990, especially during the Iraq War, Gaye's song has been played on R&B radio stations during the Christmas season.


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