Pentatonix – Christmas in the City
City Lights, Taxi Horns, And An Original That Captures Manhattan Magic
Released on October 24, 2024, as the title track and opening song from their eighth holiday album, “Christmas in the City” represents Pentatonix’s first major original holiday composition celebrating New York City at Christmastime. The song paints a vivid picture of urban holiday magic with references to city lights, crowds, taxi horns, and snowy skies, name-checking cities from New York to Chicago, Seattle, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Philadelphia. Unlike most of Pentatonix’s catalog built on acapella covers of classics, this original showcases their songwriting ambitions while capturing what Scott Hoying described as a whimsical, jazzy, cozy sound inspired by spontaneous trips to snowy Manhattan during the holidays.
The track opens the 16-song album that debuted at number six on Billboard’s Top Holiday Albums chart in November 2024. While the song itself wasn’t released as a standalone single, the album’s lead promotional track “I’ve Got My Love to Keep Me Warm” featuring Frank Sinatra reached number 26 on the Adult Contemporary chart. The album marked Pentatonix’s first release under Republic Records after departing RCA, and their first holiday project incorporating full orchestral instrumentation rather than pure acapella arrangements. This stylistic shift allowed songs like the title track to breathe with instrumental textures while maintaining the group’s signature vocal harmonies.
The song emerged from the quintet’s collaborative writing sessions during 2024, with lyrics celebrating the romance of winter city escapism. The narrative follows a couple planning to run away to various American cities during Christmas, embracing the concrete wonderland with all its fast-paced energy. Scott Hoying told BroadwayWorld they wanted to capture the theatrical energy of Dean Martin’s big band orchestral sound while remaining vocal-heavy in a Manhattan Transfer style. The composition allows each of the five members to shine individually while building ensemble moments where their voices layer into complex harmonies. The arrangement balances contemporary pop sensibilities with vintage jazz influences, creating something that feels both timeless and current.
The recording sessions took place at various studios throughout 2024 under Republic Records production, though specific location and personnel details remained largely private. The five members, Scott Hoying, Mitch Grassi, Kirstin Maldonado, Kevin Olusola, and Matt Sallee, worked with arrangers and instrumentalists to create what they envisioned as the sonic equivalent of seeing New York’s holiday lights and decorations for the first time. The addition of live instruments marked a radical departure for a group that built their reputation on vocal-only arrangements. Bass lines, percussion, and orchestral swells complement rather than replace their voices, creating a fuller sound palette than any previous Pentatonix holiday recording.
The song anchors an album concept celebrating American cities at Christmas, though New York remains the primary focus. Pentatonix formed in 2011 after winning season three of NBC’s The Sing-Off and have since sold over ten million albums worldwide while accumulating billions of streams. Their 2014 album That’s Christmas to Me became the highest-charting holiday record by a group since 1962, establishing them as holiday music royalty. A decade later, writing original holiday material rather than covering standards represented both artistic growth and commercial risk. The title track sets the tone for the entire project, establishing the cinematic New York setting before diving into jazz standards and theatrical originals.
The Christmas in the City Tour launched November 8, 2024, in West Valley City, Utah, running through December 22 with 26 arena dates including their first sold-out Madison Square Garden performance. The title track opened most shows, accompanied by projected images of Manhattan at Christmas, setting the scene for the 90-minute journey through their holiday catalog. VIP packages offered mini-performances and Q&A sessions where fans asked about the original compositions. One attendee described the show as feeling more like a rock concert than an acapella performance, with 23,000 people singing along to both the new originals and beloved covers. The tour celebrated not just the new album but their entire evolution from Sing-Off winners to arena headliners.
Sometimes the most authentic tributes to tradition come from artists brave enough to create new traditions. Pentatonix could have released another album of acapella standards and satisfied everyone. Instead, they wrote about taxi horns and snowy skies, about running away to cities where lights sparkle and crowds bustle, about finding magic in concrete rather than countryside. They added instruments after a decade of proving they didn’t need them. They opened with an original song on a Christmas album when covers have always been their safest bet. That first verse about city lights and crowds and what are we waiting for captures something real about urban holiday experiences that Bing Crosby’s white Christmas fantasies never could. Sometimes growth means writing your own story instead of endlessly covering other people’s. Sometimes the best gift is giving yourself permission to evolve

![Eddie Rabbit – I Love A Rainy Night – [Solid Gold Show]](https://musicvideosclub.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/eddie-rabbit-i-love-a-rainy-nigh-360x203.jpg)


![The Score – Revolution: Lyrics [Assassins Creed: Unity]](https://musicvideosclub.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/the-score-revolution-lyrics-assa-360x203.jpg)



















![Sister Sledge – Hes the Greatest Dancer (Official Music Video) [4K]](https://musicvideosclub.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/sister-sledge-hes-the-greatest-d-360x203.jpg)


























