via @fettywap1738 InstagramMusicNewsListen to Fetty Wap’s new Christmas trackThe ‘Trap Queen’ rapper has released a seasonal banger just in time for the holidaysShareLink copied ✔️December 16, 2015MusicNewsTextHannah Rose Ewens There’s a reason you didn’t feel in the festive mood yet. It’s not because Christmas cheer has been a bit low, or because mince pies haven’t done the rounds yet. Unbeknownst to every last one of us, it was because we Fetty Wap hadn’t written a Christmas song. Simply titled “Merry Xmas”, this is the “All I Want For Christmas” 2015 needs. It’s the heartfelt slow festive banger to play in the office as those final days roll out, the romantic audio love letter to RT in the hopes your crush will see it. No more tired Mariah because your boy Fetty is here. The track opens with its statement of intent: “This is Merry Christmas to you / We’re on another Christmas, it’s true / All I want for Christmas, is you” and rolls out into a continuation of the love song of our generation, “Trap Queen”: the Christmas edition. "You shine brighter than a diamond / I swear / And if you like it / It can be Christmas all year.” Fetty knows that December 25th isn’t the same without his lady by his side.Listen on repeat and say hello to the holidays. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MORE‘I fuck with them all’: How OsamaSon got his cult-like fanbaseWhat went down at Kraków's Unsound Festival 2025080 Barcelona Fashion080 Barcelona Fashion Week, these were your best moments‘He’s part of the fabric of my life’: Young Black fans remember D’AngeloBloodz Boi: The humble godfather of Chinese underground rap InstagramHow to stay authentic online, according to Instagram Rings creatorsA rare interview with POiSON GiRL FRiEND, dream pop’s future seerNigeria’s Blaqbonez is rapping to ‘beat his high score’Inside Erika de Casier’s shimmering R&B universe ‘Rap saved my life’: A hazy conversation with MIKE and Earl Sweatshirt7 essential albums by the SoulquariansIs AI really the future of music?