Céline Dion – O Holy Night
Sixteen Million Viewers Watched Her Conquer A 150-Year-Old Carol
Released as part of These Are Special Times on October 30, 1998, Céline Dion’s rendition of “O Holy Night” became the centerpiece of a CBS television special that dominated Thanksgiving Eve ratings. The special, broadcast on November 25, drew over sixteen million viewers and earned two Emmy nominations. Dion performed the carol backed by a full orchestra in front of a live studio audience at CBS Television City in Los Angeles, with special guests Andrea Bocelli and Rosie O’Donnell joining the broadcast. The album itself sold twelve million copies worldwide, making it the best-selling holiday album of 1998 globally. In the United States alone, it shifted over five million units, cementing Dion’s reign at the absolute peak of her commercial power.
While “O Holy Night” wasn’t released as a standalone single, the album track climbed to number 44 on Billboard’s Holiday Chart. The song has since sold 240,000 digital copies in the United States according to Nielsen SoundScan. In late 2024, Dion’s version made history when it debuted at number 84 on the Billboard Global 200 chart, marking her first appearance on that worldwide ranking. The TV special ranked number one for its broadcast night, arriving at a moment when Dion could seemingly do no wrong. These Are Special Times reached number seven on the Billboard 200 and received double platinum certification. The album dropped just months after her Let’s Talk About Love tour wrapped, capitalizing on the unstoppable momentum from “My Heart Will Go On.”
“O Holy Night” carries one of the strangest backstories in Christmas music history. French wine merchant Placide Cappeau wrote the poem “Minuit, chrétiens” in 1847 during a stagecoach ride from Mâcon to Dijon. His parish priest in Roquemaure had asked for something to celebrate the church’s newly renovated organ. Cappeau, who wasn’t particularly religious, handed the poem to composer Adolphe Adam, best known for the ballet Giselle. Adam composed the music in just days. The carol premiered at midnight mass on Christmas Eve 1847, sung by opera singer Emily Laurey. Then the controversy erupted. Church leaders discovered Cappeau had become a socialist and wrongly believed Adam was Jewish. The French Catholic Church tried to bury the song. American Unitarian minister John Sullivan Dwight translated it to English in 1855, adding anti-slavery themes during the Civil War era.
David Foster produced Dion’s version, recording it alongside other holiday standards for what would become her seventeenth studio album. Foster had been Dion’s collaborator since her 1990 English-language debut Unison, producing massive hits like “The Power of Love” and “Because You Loved Me.” For These Are Special Times, Foster and co-producer Ric Wake created lush orchestral arrangements that balanced reverence with Dion’s signature vocal power. The recording sessions captured Dion at the height of her technical abilities, navigating the carol’s demanding range and dramatic shifts. Foster would later call Dion the best singer he’d ever worked with, praising her ability to take direction while bringing emotional depth to every performance.
The album arrived following Dion’s most successful period. Falling Into You had won the Grammy for Album of the Year in 1996. Let’s Talk About Love, released in 1997, featured “My Heart Will Go On” from Titanic and sold over 31 million copies worldwide. These Are Special Times balanced traditional carols with seven original compositions, including “I’m Your Angel” with R. Kelly, which spent six weeks at number one on the Billboard Hot 100. Other singles included “The Prayer,” a duet with Bocelli that won the Golden Globe for Best Original Song. The holiday album proved Dion could dominate even outside the pop market, spending weeks in the Top 10 and becoming one of the decade’s defining Christmas records.
Mariah Carey’s 1994 version from Merry Christmas reached number 70 on the Billboard Holiday 100. Josh Groban’s 2002 recording topped the Adult Contemporary chart. Trans-Siberian Orchestra created a rock medley with “O Come All Ye Faithful” that became a holiday staple. Martina McBride’s version charted five consecutive years between 1997 and 2001 on Hot Country Songs. The carol appeared in the 2010 television series Glee, reaching number one on Holiday Digital Song Sales. In 2014, Nielsen confirmed Dion’s version had become one of the format’s biggest sellers, outperforming dozens of contemporary interpretations.
Twenty-six years after its release, Dion’s “O Holy Night” remains the definitive modern recording of the 19th-century carol. It stands as perhaps the finest vocal performance on These Are Special Times, an album that continues ranking among the top five bestsellers in the United States Christmas category. Foster captured something transcendent in those sessions, preserving a moment when the world’s biggest pop star tackled one of Christianity’s most challenging hymns and made it sound effortless. As Dion herself reflected about the album, it represented a moment of joy during the happiest period of her career, recording songs that brought comfort and celebration to millions of families every December.




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