Note that they were aiming at the disc jockeys, not the record-buying public. The deejays were the one who could make or break a record, and Mercury bet the works on “Boogie Woogie Santa Claus,” paying so little attention to the B side that they let Patti Page sing whatever she wanted to sing. She chose a little song called “Tennessee Waltz.” Of course, the disc jockeys began playing the flip side, and it took off like a rocket. It became Patti Page’s all-time biggest hit, with nine weeks at #1, and it sold more than 10 million copies. So Mercury reprinted the record with “Tennessee Waltz” as the A side, and “Boogie Woogie Santa Claus” as the B – and then “Boogie Woogie Santa Claus” was dropped from the record entirely, replaced with another ballad.