Gold and Green

{{About|the Sugarland album|the OOIOO album|Gold and Green (OOIOO album)}}

{{Infobox album

| name = Gold and Green

| type = Studio

| longtype = (Christmas)

| artist = Sugarland

| cover = GoldAndGreen.jpg

| released = October 13, 2009

| recorded = July 2009

| studio =

| genre = {{hlist|Christmas|country}}

| length = 37:04

| label = Mercury Nashville

| producer = {{hlist|Byron Gallimore|Sugarland}}

| prev_title = Live on the Inside

| prev_year = 2009

| next_title = The Incredible Machine

| next_year = 2010

}}

{{Album ratings

| rev1 = Allmusic

| rev1Score = {{rating|2|5}}

| rev2 = Paste

| rev2Score = (38/100){{cite web|url=http://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2009/11/sugarland-gold-and-green.html |title=Gold and Green review|last=Albertson|first=Cory|accessdate=1 December 2009}}

| rev3 = Engine 145

| rev3Score = {{Rating|2|5}}{{cite web|url=http://www.engine145.com/album-review-sugarland-gold-and-green/ |title=Album Review: Sugarland – Gold and Green |last=Deusner |first=Stephen M. |work=Engine 145 |accessdate=July 7, 2011 |url-status=usurped |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141218105251/http://www.engine145.com/album-review-sugarland-gold-and-green/ |archivedate=December 18, 2014 }}

| rev4 = Roughstock

| rev4Score = (favorable)

}}

Gold and Green is the fourth studio album and first Christmas album from American country music duo Sugarland. The album was released on October 13, 2009, through Mercury Records Nashville. It features five original songs penned by group members Jennifer Nettles and Kristian Bush and five traditional holiday songs that were also previously included as part of a Wal-Mart-exclusive re-release of the duo's 2006 album Enjoy the Ride.

Critical reception

Thom Jurek of Allmusic gave a two-star review, calling it "an obvious, cloying exercise in marketing" and saying that it "holds little artistic merit."{{cite web|url={{AllMusic|class=album|id=r1660552|pure_url=yes}}|title=Gold and Green review|last=Jurek|first=Thom|work=Allmusic|accessdate=2009-10-14}} Paste critic Cory Albertson similarly said, "Gold and Green’s schizophrenic tone seems tailored for mass consumption by country radio and the soccer-mom set, but most other listeners will need far more eggnog to stomach such uninspired holiday cheer." Matt Bjorke reviewed it positively on Roughstock, saying, "City of Silver Dreams" could actually find itself a seminal holiday song like Joni Mitchell’s "River" as it tells a wonderfully soft and melodic story of New York City and the beauty of a new romance within the context of Christmas." The song was co-written with Lisa Carver and Ellis Paul.{{cite news |url=http://www.roughstock.com/reviews/sugarland-gold-and-green |title=Gold and Green review |last=Bjorke |first=Matt |date=2009-10-14 |work=Roughstock |accessdate=2009-10-15 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20091017102712/http://www.roughstock.com/reviews/sugarland-gold-and-green |archivedate=2009-10-17 }}

Track listing

{{tracklist

| title1 = City of Silver Dreams

| writer1 = {{hlist|Kristian Bush|Jennifer Nettles|Lisa Carver||Ellis Paul}}

| length1 = 4:28

| title2 = Winter Wonderland

| writer2 = {{hlist|Felix Bernard|Richard B. Smith}}

| length2 = 2:27

| title3 = Holly Jolly Christmas

| writer3 = Johnny Marks

| length3 = 3:06

| title4 = Coming Home

| writer4 = {{hlist|Bush|Nettles}}

| length4 = 3:33

| title5 = Gold and Green

| writer5 = {{hlist|Bush|Nettles}}

| length5 = 4:02

| title6 = Maybe Baby (New Year's Day)

| writer6 = {{hlist|Bush|Nettles|Troy Bieser}}

| length6 = 5:02

| title7 = Nuttin' for Christmas

| writer7 = {{hlist|Sid Tepper|Roy C. Bennett}}

| length7 = 3:24

| title8 = O Come, O Come, Emmanuel

| writer8 = Traditional

| length8 = 4:08

| title9 = Little Wood Guitar

| writer9 = {{hlist|Bush|Paul}}

| length9 = 4:12

| title10 = Silent Night

| writer10 = Traditional

| length10 = 3:22

}}

Personnel

;Sugarland

;Additional Musicians

Chart performance

;Album

Gold and Green debuted at No. 12 on the U.S. Billboard Top Country Albums chart; it has since risen to a peak of No. 3 on the chart. During the 2009 holiday season, the set sold approximately 256,000 copies.{{cite web | url =http://www.cmt.com/news/country-music/1629222/country-albums-sales-down-again-slightly-in-2009.jhtml | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20100109150450/http://www.cmt.com/news/country-music/1629222/country-albums-sales-down-again-slightly-in-2009.jhtml | url-status =dead | archive-date =January 9, 2010 | title =Country Albums Sales Down Again Slightly in 2009 | author =Edward Morris | date =January 7, 2010 | publisher =CMT | access-date = May 5, 2011}}

class="wikitable"
Chart (2009)

! Peak
position

U.S. Billboard Top Country Albums

| align="center"| 3

U.S. Billboard 200

| align="center"| 24

U.S. Billboard Top Holiday Albums

| align="center"| 3

;End of year charts

class="wikitable"
Chart (2010)

!Year-end
2010

US Billboard 200

|align="center"|163{{cite web |url=http://www.billboard.com/charts/year-end/2010/the-billboard-200 |title=Best of 2010 - Billboard Top 200 |work=Billboard |publisher=Nielsen Business Media, Inc |accessdate=2010-12-31}}

US Billboard Top Country Albums

|align="center"|33{{cite web |url=http://www.billboard.com/charts/year-end/2010/top-country-albums |title=Best of 2010 - Top Country Albums |work=Billboard |publisher=Nielsen Business Media, Inc |accessdate=2010-12-31}}

References