Holiday music is an umbrella category that groups songs and styles expressly created for, or strongly associated with, specific festive days and seasons. Rather than being a single musical style, it is defined by theme and function: to accompany celebration, ritual, community gatherings, and seasonal moods.
In practice, “holiday music” encompasses Christmas carols and pop standards, Hanukkah songs, patriotic music tied to national holidays, carnival/parade repertoires, Allhallowtide/Halloween cues, New Year songs, and many regional traditions such as Latin American aguinaldos and parrandas, Haitian rara, Iberian caramelles, and South American murga. Its arrangements range from intimate folk caroling and liturgical choral writing to big‑band swing, pop balladry, rock, R&B, and marching-band formats.
Musically, holiday songs often employ memorable melodies, consonant harmonies (frequently in major keys), choral textures, bell or glockenspiel colors, and lyrical topics that center on community, winter imagery, faith, remembrance, and celebration. In the recording era, holiday music also became a seasonal commercial genre, with standards revived annually and new songs joining the canon.