Lyrics — “What Should I Get You For Christmas”Read along
Christian recording artist whose honest songs about anxiety, grief, and healing — from Look What You've Done
to Into the Sea (It's Gonna Be Ok)
— have reached millions worldwide. Come Christmas she steps into a different lane entirely: an authentic big band and jazz sound that has become the signature of her holiday catalog, which streams hard every December.
- Billboard Top 5 Female Christian Artist
- Multiple #1 songs at Christian radio
- 4 yrs touring vocalist with Katy Perry
- Latest album: Life In Me (Oct 2025)
All figures verified via Spotify for Artists (peak period ending Dec 25, 2025; baseline June 2026). The seasonal surge is driven by perennial holiday plays like “Into the Sea (It’s Gonna Be Ok)” alongside a deep, growing Christmas catalog (below).
Two Decembers, Climbing
Two years running and climbing: ~3M (Dec 2024) → 4.02M (Dec 2025, all-time high), against a 741K June 2026 baseline — a 5.4× seasonal swing. The dashed line projects a purpose-built duet into the Dec 2026 window.
All-time streams via Spotify for Artists, banked almost entirely inside ~6–8 week Nov–Dec windows. Lined up by age, it's a compounding ladder: 1 season → 2.1M · 2 seasons → 5.75M · ~5 seasons → 10.5M. Every December is another deposit. A Christmas release isn't a one-time stream — it's a seasonal annuity. Plant the duet now and it pays out for years.
A distant duet. Split screen start to finish: she's overthinking it in one store, he's overwhelmed in another, both begging Santa for help, both striking out. The two-voices / two-places device has real pedigree — Frozen, Hamilton, Les Misérables — but those play in counterpoint, each voice a different lyric. Here they sing the same words at the same time, so the irony needs no reveal. It's The Gift of the Magi with a laugh track... and the screens only collapse into one frame on the final line, when they turn and find each other singing the same song.