All I Want for Christmas is for Mariah Carey to Sing With Jimmy Fallon and the Roots

This week on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon, as Fallon and The Roots played toy instruments, Mariah Carey joined them, along with some children, for a rousing rendition of “All I Want for Christmas is You.” Check it out.

Although now it seems like “All I Want for Christmas” is a holiday classic that has been around forever, it was written by Mariah Carey and Walter Afanasieff, becoming a hit song in 1994. There are a number of great versions, including Carey’s original and Olivia Olson‘s charming cover in the fun holiday movie Love Actually (2003). Now we can add this version with the Roots to the list.

What is your favorite version of “All I Want for Christmas”? Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • I Wish It Was Christmas Today
  • New York Is Not “Invisible” When U2 Play on Fallon Debut
  • Pres. Obama Slow Jams the News with Jimmy Fallon
  • John Legend and The Roots Perform “Dancing in the Dark”
  • What Song Did George Bailey Sing?: A Quiz on Christmas Songs on the Screen
  • This Week in Pop Culture Roundup (11 Dec. 2011)
  • (Some related Chimesfreedom posts.)

    Buy from Amazon

    Pres. Obama Slow Jams the News with Jimmy Fallon

    Last night, Pres. Barack Obama joined Jimmy Fallon to slow jam the news on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon. In the periodic segment on the show, someone reads the news while Fallon and his band The Roots riff on the straight news. So for our funny video of the week, check out Pres. Obama, Jimmy Fallon, and The Roots slow jammin’ the news.

    For the most part Pres. Obama played it straight delivering campaign lines addressed to the college crowd at the show’s taping at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. Still, “the Preezy of the United Steezy” was a good sport for participating in the funny segment. “Oh yeah.”

    What did you think of the President going on the late night talk show? Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • New York Is Not “Invisible” When U2 Play on Fallon Debut
  • Steven Spielberg’s New Film with “Daniel Day-Lewis” as Obama
  • All I Want for Christmas is for Mariah Carey to Sing With Jimmy Fallon and the Roots
  • Sexy and I Know It: Neil & Bruce Cover
  • John Legend and The Roots Perform “Dancing in the Dark”
  • I Wish It Was Christmas Today
  • (Some Related Chimesfreedom Posts)

    Sexy and I Know It: Neil & Bruce Cover

    After hearing that Late Night with Jimmy Fallon was devoting a whole show to Bruce Springsteen, I had little doubt that they would reprise a Niel Young-Bruce Springsteen duet like they did on an earlier show with “Whip My Hair.”

    But last night, instead of a Born-to-Run-era Springsteen, the Boss got out his old bandana and came as Born-in-the-USA Springsteen. This time, they sang LMFAO’s “Sexy and I Know It,” with Springsteen in on the joke making fun of his former muscle-shirted self exchanging his usual “whoa, whoa, whoa” with “wiggle, wiggle, wiggle.”

    (May 2012 Update: The link from NBC apparently no longer works, but you may also see the video on YouTube here.) If you missed the show and wish to see the Springsteen interview as well as his performances with the E Steet Band of two new songs from the new album — “Death to My Hometown” and “Jack of All Trades” — as well as a rousing “E Street Shuffle” with the Roots, you may find them at Consequences of Sound and at Blogness on the Edge of Town.

    What do you think of the cover of “Sexy and I Know It”? Funny or just a retread of “Whip My Hair”? Leave your two cents in the comments. If you like the post, retweet it!

  • Springsteen and Fallon as Two Springsteens Stuck in a Traffic Jam
  • John Legend and The Roots Perform “Dancing in the Dark”
  • Bruce Springsteen on Jimmy Fallon: Wrecking Ball
  • New York Is Not “Invisible” When U2 Play on Fallon Debut
  • Late Night With Jimmy Fallon’s Last Waltz
  • All-Star “Fairytale of New York” on Jimmy Fallon
  • (Some Related Chimesfreedom Posts)

    John Legend and The Roots Perform “Dancing in the Dark”

    John Legend Dancing in the Dark This week on “Late Night with Jimmy Fallon,” John Legend and The Roots performed an excellent cover of Bruce Springsteen’s “Dancing in the Dark” from Springsteen’s Born in the USA (1984). To top it off, Legend also made the performance MP3 available to fans with a free download.

    2024 Update: Unfortunately, the performance with the Roots is no longer available, but here is another performance by Legend singing “Dancing in the Dark”:

    What do you think of John Legend’s cover? Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • New York Is Not “Invisible” When U2 Play on Fallon Debut
  • Springsteen and Fallon as Two Springsteens Stuck in a Traffic Jam
  • Sexy and I Know It: Neil & Bruce Cover
  • Bruce Springsteen on Jimmy Fallon: Wrecking Ball
  • Alt-Country Tribute to Springsteen’s “Born in the U.S.A.”
  • Late Night With Jimmy Fallon’s Last Waltz
  • (Some Related Chimesfreedom Posts)

    Bruce Springsteen on Jimmy Fallon: Wrecking Ball

    Springsteen Jimmy Fallon Nils Lofgren
    Nils Lofgren Directs the Horns

    Bruce Springsteen’s new album, Wrecking Ball will be released on March 6, and this week Late Night with Jimmy Fallon features a Springsteen theme, with artists covering Springsteen songs as well as the man and his band appearing last night and again on Friday. Last night, Springsteen performed the first single, “We Take Care of Our Own” as well as the title track, which is below.

    The song “Wrecking Ball” may be familiar to Springsteen fans because in 2009 Springsteen debuted the song at the Meadowlands, i.e., Giants Stadium, during his final shows at the stadium before it succombed to the wrecking ball. The song maintains references to the stadium being demolished (“where the blood is spilled, the arena’s filled, and Giants played”), but it holds up on the album because the song connects the stadium’s wrecking ball to more universal themes of aging, hard times, and standing up to both.

    [2020 Update: Unfortunately, the Jimmy Fallon video is no longer available so below is Springsteen performing “Wrecking Ball” at Giants Stadium.]

    While the lyrics on the album are touched by our recent economic troubles, the music of several of the songs are influenced by Springsteen’s uplifting work with the Seeger Sessions Band. This recession-era CD is the first E Street band album without Clarence Clemons, so it seems appropriate that the album is tinged with sorrow while steeped in joyful horns helping us through the rough times.

  • Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band: “Purple Rain”
  • Springsteen and Fallon as Two Springsteens Stuck in a Traffic Jam
  • New Springsteen Video: “Dream Baby Dream”
  • Springsteen’s “Whoop-Ass Session on the Recession” in Greensboro (Guest Post)
  • Land of Hope & Dreams, This Train, and People Get Ready
  • Sexy and I Know It: Neil & Bruce Cover
  • (Some Related Chimesfreedom Posts)