Recorded Music NZ. In: aotearoamusiccharts.co.nz. Abgerufen am 21. November 2024 (englisch).
Recorded Music NZ. In: aotearoamusiccharts.co.nz. Abgerufen am 21. November 2024 (englisch).
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Devan Stuart: No Jingle in His Pockets - Orange Park guitarist sings blues about lost royalties. In: Jacksonville Business Journal. 27. August 2001, archiviert vom Original am 10. Dezember 2019; abgerufen am 10. Dezember 2019 (englisch): „(Hank Garland:) 'I'm angry about it... I let it [the original version of the song] hop back to where it came from. It wasn't any good.' Hank and Helms came up with the "Jingle Bell Rock" America hears every holiday season, he (Garland) said. (David Davis, former manager for Bobby Helms:) 'Bobby and I discussed it many times. He (Bobby) said 'We [, Garland and I,] did it. We threw a bridge in, added a couple of verses, changed the words.' Basically, it was a whole new song. Bobby never tried to get royalties. He said [to me], `David, it'd be a joke. You know how the music business is.' And I do.". (Bill Whitacre, Entertainment attorney:) "What I believe happened is that they [Decca] treated this as a session where they owned it and controlled it.' (Billy Garland, Hank Garland's brother who has power of attorney over Hank Garland's estate:) 'The industry owes Garland $100 million in royalties from hits "Jingle Bell Rock" and "Sugarfoot Rag,"'“
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ARIA. In: aria.com.au. Abgerufen am 25. Dezember 2022 (englisch).
audiogest.pt
AFP. In: audiogest.pt. Abgerufen am 25. Dezember 2022 (portugiesisch).
Mariah Carey's 'Christmas' Climbs to No. 3 on Billboard Hot 100, Ariana Grande's 'Next' Leads for Seventh Week. In: Billboard. 31. Dezember 2018 (englisch, billboard.com [abgerufen am 2. August 2019]).
Gary Trust: Mariah Carey Becomes First Artist at No. 1 on Billboard Hot 100 in Four Decades, Thanks to 'All I Want for Christmas'. In: Billboard. 30. Dezember 2019 (englisch, billboard.com [abgerufen am 31. Dezember 2019]).
Devan Stuart: No Jingle in His Pockets - Orange Park guitarist sings blues about lost royalties. In: Jacksonville Business Journal. 27. August 2001, archiviert vom Original am 10. Dezember 2019; abgerufen am 10. Dezember 2019 (englisch): „(Hank Garland:) 'I'm angry about it... I let it [the original version of the song] hop back to where it came from. It wasn't any good.' Hank and Helms came up with the "Jingle Bell Rock" America hears every holiday season, he (Garland) said. (David Davis, former manager for Bobby Helms:) 'Bobby and I discussed it many times. He (Bobby) said 'We [, Garland and I,] did it. We threw a bridge in, added a couple of verses, changed the words.' Basically, it was a whole new song. Bobby never tried to get royalties. He said [to me], `David, it'd be a joke. You know how the music business is.' And I do.". (Bill Whitacre, Entertainment attorney:) "What I believe happened is that they [Decca] treated this as a session where they owned it and controlled it.' (Billy Garland, Hank Garland's brother who has power of attorney over Hank Garland's estate:) 'The industry owes Garland $100 million in royalties from hits "Jingle Bell Rock" and "Sugarfoot Rag,"'“
Jingle Bell Rock. In: Songfacts.com. Songfacts®, LLC, archiviert vom Original am 26. August 2019; abgerufen am 10. Dezember 2019 (englisch): „Before his death, Garland filed suit against the record label, claiming that he and Helms, not Beal and Boothe, wrote the song.“
David Lindquist: 'Jingle Bell Rock' cemented legacy for Hoosier Bobby Helms. (Newspaper) In: Indystar.com. IndyStar, 16. Dezember 2014, archiviert vom Original am 25. August 2019; abgerufen am 10. Dezember 2019 (englisch): „"I really didn't want to cut it because it was such a bad song. So me and one of the musicians [, Hank Garland,] worked on it for about an hour putting a melody to it and we put a bridge to it," said Helms [in a 1992 interview]"“
John G O’Leary: Jingle bell robbery? In: Businesslessonsfromrock.com. 18. Dezember 2013, archiviert vom Original am 21. April 2016; abgerufen am 10. Dezember 2019 (englisch): „At the very least, Helms and Garland should have been granted co-writer credit, given the new melody, verses, bridge, and lyrics.“
John G O’Leary: Trouble in Jingle Bell Square. In: Businesslessonsfromrock.com. 7. Dezember 2016, archiviert vom Original am 22. Februar 2019; abgerufen am 10. Dezember 2019 (englisch): „This week I spoke with Hank Garland's younger brother Billy ... Neither [Garland or Helms] received any of the multi-million dollars in songwriting royalties they believed they were due. Billy has been on an indefatigable crusade for nearly six decades to vindicate his brother’s claims“
Bastien Quentin: Jingle Bell Rock by Brenda Lee. In: secondhandsongs.com/. SecondHandSongs, 29. Dezember 2005, abgerufen am 6. Dezember 2022 (englisch).
Jingle Bell Rock. In: Songfacts.com. Songfacts®, LLC, archiviert vom Original am 26. August 2019; abgerufen am 10. Dezember 2019 (englisch): „Before his death, Garland filed suit against the record label, claiming that he and Helms, not Beal and Boothe, wrote the song.“
David Lindquist: 'Jingle Bell Rock' cemented legacy for Hoosier Bobby Helms. (Newspaper) In: Indystar.com. IndyStar, 16. Dezember 2014, archiviert vom Original am 25. August 2019; abgerufen am 10. Dezember 2019 (englisch): „"I really didn't want to cut it because it was such a bad song. So me and one of the musicians [, Hank Garland,] worked on it for about an hour putting a melody to it and we put a bridge to it," said Helms [in a 1992 interview]"“
John G O’Leary: Jingle bell robbery? In: Businesslessonsfromrock.com. 18. Dezember 2013, archiviert vom Original am 21. April 2016; abgerufen am 10. Dezember 2019 (englisch): „At the very least, Helms and Garland should have been granted co-writer credit, given the new melody, verses, bridge, and lyrics.“
John G O’Leary: Trouble in Jingle Bell Square. In: Businesslessonsfromrock.com. 7. Dezember 2016, archiviert vom Original am 22. Februar 2019; abgerufen am 10. Dezember 2019 (englisch): „This week I spoke with Hank Garland's younger brother Billy ... Neither [Garland or Helms] received any of the multi-million dollars in songwriting royalties they believed they were due. Billy has been on an indefatigable crusade for nearly six decades to vindicate his brother’s claims“