Jingle those bells! Here are the top 10 holiday songs

Be of good cheer: The sounds of the season will ring out at Symphony Center over the next few weeks. Holiday fare begins in earnest with “The Wizard of Oz"  in Concert (Nov. 29-Dec. 1), followed by the Vienna Boys Choir: Christmas in Vienna (Nov. 30), “A Chanticleer Christmas” (Dec. 10, this season at Symphony Center), “Elf” in Concert (Dec. 13-15), the Chicago Symphony Orchestra Brass (Dec. 17) and the CSO’s annual holiday revue Merry, Merry Chicago! (Dec. 18-23). With all of that holiday goodness, it’s a safe bet that some of your favorite carols and Christmas classics will reverberate throughout Orchestra Hall during the yuletide.

With that in mind, here are the most popular holiday songs, as measured by radio airplay, according to the media research film the Nielsen Co., along with Mediabase and Billboard magazine:

1. Mariah Carey, “All I Want for Christmas Is You” (1994): Step into any mall this season, and you’ll be sure to hear this millennial-era favorite.

2. Brenda Lee, “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree” (1962): Written by Johnny Marks, the song was recorded by the leather-lunged Lee when she was just 13.

3. Bobby Helms, “Jingle Bell Rock” (1962): Written in 1957, it’s a yuletide mash-up of “Jingle Bells” and Bill Haley’s “Rock Around the Clock.” A native of Bloomington, Indiana, Helms made it his signature song.

4. José Feliciano, “Feliz Navidad” (1970): Born in Puerto Rico, the singer-songwriter deliberately chose to sing the lyrics in English, so that mainland U.S. radio stations would play the tune. (It’s often on the set list for the CSO’s “Merry, Merry Chicago!”)

5. Nat King Cole, “The Christmas Song” (1949): This holiday chestnut offers a double shot of Chicago: Mel Tormé, who grew up in Hyde Park, co-wrote with Robert Wells this classic, which Cole, a graduate of Wendell Phillips High School on the South Side, first popularized.

6. Andy Williams, “It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year” (1963): Popularized on the crooner’s variety TV series, the song was first released on his 1963 Christmas album.

7. Bing Crobsy, “White Christmas” (1944): The ultimate Christmas classic for the post-war generation, it was introduced in the film “Holiday Inn.”

8. Trans-Siberan Orchestra, “Christmas Eve/Sarajevo” (1995): It’s an instrumental medley of “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen” and the Ukrainian carol “Shchedryk.”

9. Johnny Mathis, “It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas” (1986): During the LP era, the balladeer was one of the first to record a full-length Christmas album (“Merry Christmas,” 1958). Since then, he has released several other holiday collections; this song is from “Christmas Eve With Johnny Mathis” (1986).

10. Burl Ives, “A Holly Jolly Christmas” (1965): A native of Hunt City, in southeast Illinois, Oscar-winning actor Burl Ives popularized this song via his role as Sam the Snowman in the Rankin-Bass stop-motion animated TV special “Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer” (1964).