"Joys of Christmas" is a song by British singer-songwriter Chris Rea, which was released in 1987 as the third single from his ninth studio album Dancing with Strangers. The song was written and produced by Rea. "Joys of Christmas" reached No. 67 in the UK Singles Chart and remained in the Top 100 for two weeks.[2]
"Joys of Christmas" was inspired by Rea's own experiences of growing up as a child in Middlesbrough. Rea recalled for the liner notes of the 2019 re-issue of Dancing with Strangers,
"This song was the Christmas I knew when I was young. My dad had a coffee bar [which] was over the road from where you used to get your dole money, next to a working men's club and the labour exchange. And all of that used to descend on me in the afternoon, in my nylon white coat, which had this funny little man in a chef's uniform, and the words 'Mr Really Good', with the R-E-A in red, and the rest in blue. I was just a sitting target. Sometimes I had to go to hospital on the way home, to get something stitched. It was like that all the time."[3]
On its release as a single, Danny Baker of New Musical Express questioned "Joys of Christmas" as an A-side and felt that the "wee low-key gift tucked away on the B-side", "Driving Home for Christmas", was "the real winner". He added, "'Joys of Christmas' isn't even a seasonally recorded deal. It says here that it's from his last LP. How very odd."[5] In a review of Dancing with Strangers, Robin DenselowofThe Guardian described "Joys of Christmas" as a "bleak view of life in the North" and noted the song's "melodic bluesy feel" and "spoken pieces".[6] Helen Metella of the Edmonton Journal commented that the song "juxtaposes a modern hymn against the snapshots of out-of-work youth in north England".[7] James Muretich of the Calgary Herald felt Rea had "penned a classic" with "Joys of Christmas" and noted its "cutting, Claptonish guitar licks" and "tales of hardship amid the season of supposed joy".[8]