
However, the research shows that Chris Rea’s ‘Driving Home for Christmas’, at 90 bpm, may be too slow to suitably stimulate motorists on monotonous motorway trips.

With nearly half (45 per cent) of Brits planning to drive home for Christmas this year, around 23.9 million people say they’ll be behind the wheel when travelling to visit friends or family over the festive period. In partnership with an academic study from Brunel University London, Coventry University and the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), part of UK Research and Innovation, Direct Line can reveal the festive songs that can have the best and worst effects on a motorist’s mental state when driving home for Christmas – and the ones that are better suited to rockin’ around the Christmas tree. They're a group of goofballs that have a lot of fun with their videos.New research shows ‘Driving Home for Christmas’ may not be the perfect song to listen to while actually driving home for Christmas. In the video, they're helping out Santa by doing his deliveries, and again, it's not meant to be taken seriously. I used to wish it would be special on this special dayīut not anymore, I only hope nothing ever happens It's even hard to walk in, it's not a snowfield, it's a mud flat Look how fast the selfish cars made it turn black

it's all just tongue in cheek complaining. They spend the entire song complaining about the weather, about how the snow is only pretty for a minute or two, how the only calls they get are spam calls. If you turn on the closed captions, you'll see the translated lyrics. They've done a Christmas song and it's catchy as all get out.

I remember the first time I heard Felix speak and he had that accent, I admit I did a double take. Two of them were actually raised in Australia, fun fact. They were originally nine members, now they're eight. You know I like the K-Pop thing, and yes, they do Christmas songs, too! This one is by a group that I've liked for a while called Stray Kids.
