"Walkin' 'Round in Women's Underwear"[3][4] - 1:55
(parody of "Winter Wonderland" about cross-dressing)[1] performed by a-capella group Fifth Inversion
"I Am Santa Claus" - 3:22
(sung to tune of "Iron Man" by Black Sabbath, except the last ten notes on the prominent guitar riff are replaced with five notes from Jingle Bells.)[5]
A music video was made for the title track, in which Rivers, playing a father of two, inexplicably transforms into a heavy-metal Santa Claus riding in a reindeer-pulled limousine on Christmas Eve. In a meta-cameo, Ozzy Osbourne, in a black-and-white universe watching the video on a television, angrily turns the TV off, transforming metal-Santa (in the middle of a concert) back into Rivers.[6]
(mini-musical parody of The Wizard of Oz, in which the Emerald City/North Pole is replaced with a commercialized shopping mall-type environment, briefly parodies the song "If I Only Had a Brain")
J. D. Considine wrote in the Baltimore Sun that "Rivers' idea of 'funny' generally seems the work of a guy who's read too many issues of Mad magazine, but there are some good bits here."[8] Helen Bryant of The Dallas Morning News wrote "Irving Berlin, it's not"[1] while the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette called the album "this year's hip offering."
Chart performance
By late December 2003, the album had already sold more than 100,000 copies.[9]I Am Santa Claus entered the Billboard Top Albums chart at #180[9] before peaking at #106.
References
^ abcBryant, Helen (December 21, 1993). "Irving Berlin it's not". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved February 26, 2010. At the top of the charts on this year's Christmas Hit Parade we find a harmonious ditty to the tune of Walkin'in a Winter Wonderland. It's called Walkin' Round in Women's Underwear.
^ abReader, Stephanie (December 22, 1993). "Raunchy rock, rap stations clear the air - sorta". The News Tribune. Tacoma, WA. p. E2. Archived from the original on June 4, 2011. Retrieved February 26, 2010. His new Atlantic release, "I Am Santa Claus," has sold more than 100000 copies and has broken into the Billboard Top Albums chart (at No. 180).