A Midsummer's Christmas Wish
The story begins not in a cozy, fire-lit cabin, but in Toluca Lake, California, during a blistering hot July in 1945. A young Mel Tormé, the musician who would later be known as "The Velvet Fog," went to visit his songwriting partner, Robert Wells. Upon
arriving at Wells' home, Tormé found the house empty but noticed a spiral notepad resting on the piano. On it were four lines scrawled in pencil, describing a scene that was the complete opposite of the oppressive heat outside: "Chestnuts roasting on an open fire. Jack Frost nipping at your nose. Yuletide carols being sung by a choir. And folks dressed up like Eskimos."
The Idea That Was Nearly Scrapped
When Wells finally appeared, looking overheated in tennis shorts, Tormé asked him about the wintry poem. Wells brushed it off. "It's so damn hot today, I thought I'd write something to cool myself off," he explained. He hadn't thought he was writing a song lyric; it was just a mental exercise, an attempt to "think cool" by immersing himself in thoughts of winter. This was the pivotal moment. Those four lines, jotted down to escape the heat, could have easily been forgotten or crumpled up. The "tape" that was almost thrown away wasn't a recording, but something far more fragile: the very first spark of an idea on a scrap of paper.
Forty-Five Minutes to a Classic
But Tormé saw the potential immediately. "I think you might have something here," he told Wells. The two sat down at the piano, and with Tormé crafting the melody and both collaborating on the lyrics, a masterpiece began to take shape. The creative energy was so potent that, by Tormé's own account, the entire song was completed in about 45 minutes. What began as a desperate daydream to escape a heatwave had, in less than an hour, become a fully formed song, capturing the sights, sounds, and feelings of Christmas with a warmth that belied its sweaty origins.
Finding the Perfect Voice
Excited by what they had created, Tormé and Wells knew they needed the perfect artist to bring it to life. Their immediate choice was the velvety-voiced singer and pianist Nat King Cole. They rushed into Hollywood to play it for Cole's manager, and then for Cole himself, who reportedly fell in love with the song on the spot. It took nearly a year for Cole to get into a studio to record it, but his instincts were right. The King Cole Trio first recorded the track in June 1946. At Cole's own insistence, a second version was recorded just two months later, adding a small string section over the objections of the record label—a decision that proved to be brilliant.
The Recording That Defined a Holiday
Released in the fall of 1946, Nat King Cole's version of "The Christmas Song" became an instant hit. Interestingly, the very first pressings contained a slight grammatical error, with Cole singing "To see if reindeers really know how to fly." After Tormé pointed it out, the line was corrected in subsequent recordings. Cole would go on to record the song several times, but it is his 1961 stereo version, recorded with a full orchestra, that is widely regarded as the definitive one. That recording was so culturally significant it was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1974 and selected for preservation in the National Recording Registry by the Library of Congress in 2022.












