A Holly Jolly Christmas - Playtime Christmas - pg. 18-19

Pop Music

Difficulty Level: 1

(65 Points)

Description:

“A Holly Jolly Christmas - Playtime Christmas - pg. 18-19” is classified as a Level 1 Piano work worth 65 points within the Road to Virtuosity progression system. It is categorized under Faber Piano Adventures → Level 1 - Playtime Christmas and is part of the Pop Music collection. The sheet music for “A Holly Jolly Christmas - Playtime Christmas - pg. 18-19” provided on this website has the following copyright status: Copyrighted.

“A Holly Jolly Christmas - PlayTime Christmas - pg. 18-19” is a Level 1 method-book arrangement of Johnny Marks’s Christmas song. The student part is written in Middle C position, with simple melody notes, basic hand sharing between treble and bass, printed fingering guidance, and a teacher duet part that fills out the harmony underneath. The arrangement keeps the cheerful character of the song while making the student part accessible for an early-level pianist.

Measures 1–8 present the opening phrase, beginning with “Have a holly jolly Christmas.” The student melody moves mostly by step and small skips, with the hands staying close to Middle C position. The left hand enters with simple supporting notes, while the teacher duet supplies the fuller rhythmic and harmonic background.

Measures 9–16 continue the first page with the “walk down the street” and “friends you know” text. The student part remains simple and singable, with long slurs shaping the melody across several measures. The written note “move 5 to E” helps guide the student into the next hand position change.

Measures 17–24 move into the “mistletoe” section. The melody becomes a little broader, with longer notes and a softer overall feeling before returning toward the main song idea. The left hand continues with simple support, while the teacher duet gives this middle section a fuller accompaniment sound.

Measures 25–33 bring back the main “holly jolly Christmas” material and close the arrangement. The student part returns to the familiar melody, then grows through a crescendo into the final forte ending. The last phrase gives the short arrangement a bright, confident close.

Interesting fact: “A Holly Jolly Christmas” became especially famous through Burl Ives’s performance in the 1964 television special Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. Because of that connection, the song is strongly associated not only with Christmas music, but also with classic holiday television.

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