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The Muppets: A Green and Red Christmas is a Christmas album by The Muppets. The album was released by Walt Disney Records on October 17, 2006, on CD and as a digital download in the iTunes Store. In 2008, the album won a Grammy Award for Best Musical Album for Children. [1]
The title is wordplay on the phrase "green Christmas", a Christmas with no snow, with "green" taking on a double meaning of the green ink uniformly used on U.S. currency. This and the replacement of each "s" in "Christmas" with a U.S. dollar sign refer to the theme of the sketch, the over-commercialization of Christmas.
"Green Christmas" is a Christmas song by the Barenaked Ladies from the soundtrack for the 2000 film How The Grinch Stole Christmas!. [1] [2] It was later re-recorded as a studio acoustic version for the Christmas compilation Maybe This Christmas Too? in 2003, [3] and re-recorded again for the band's own holiday album, Barenaked for the Holidays, released in 2004. [4]
Green Christmas may refer to: "Green Christmas" (Barenaked Ladies song), a song by the Barenaked Ladies from the How the Grinch Stole Christmas film soundtrack "Green Christmas" (Stan Freberg song), a piece of audio theater written and performed by Stan Freberg and Daws Butler; Green Christmas Festival, an annual rock festival in Estonia
According to NPR, in the Victorian era, Christmas had a much wider and varied palette, which featured combinations of red and green, red and blue, blue and green, or blue and white—and that ...
The discography of the Muppets, an American puppet ensemble group originally created by Jim Henson, includes of sixteen studio albums, four compilation albums, one extended play, eight singles, two "featured artist" singles and five music videos.
Others, like Taylor Swift, CeeLo Green, and Sia, released forgettable or cringeworthy Christmas albums. The Christmas album is one of music's most storied and cheesy traditions.
An E.P. of Hanukkah-themed songs named the Barenaked for Hanukkah E.P. was released as a digital download on November 15, 2005. It contains a live version of "Hanukkah, O Hanukkah" from the band's Toronto concert on November 20, 2004, as well as the album versions of "Hanukkah Blessings" and "I Have a Little Dreidel".