Home for Christmas (Dolly Parton album) explained

Home for Christmas
Type:studio
Artist:Dolly Parton
Cover:Dolly Parton - Home For Christmas album cover.jpg
Released:September 11, 1990
Recorded:July 1990
Studio:Nightingale Studios (Nashville)
Length:31:50
Label:Columbia Nashville
Prev Title:White Limozeen
Prev Year:1989
Next Title:Eagle When She Flies
Next Year:1991

Home for Christmas is the thirtieth solo studio album by American singer-songwriter Dolly Parton. It was released on September 11, 1990, by Columbia Records. The album was produced by Gary Smith, with Parton serving as executive producer. It is Parton's second Christmas album, following 1984's Once Upon a Christmas with Kenny Rogers. Unlike Once Upon a Christmas, which featured a number of original songs, Home for Christmas is made up of ten Christmas standards. The album's release was accompanied by an ABC television special, Dolly Parton: Christmas at Home. The album was certified Gold by the RIAA in 1994.

Release and promotion

The album was released September 11, 1990, on CD and cassette. It also received a limited LP release exclusively in the Netherlands.

There were no singles released from the album. Instead, Parton promoted the album's release with a television special titled Dolly Parton: Christmas at Home. It aired December 21, 1990, on ABC.[1] The special features footage of Parton in the studio recording the album, visiting and singing with her family at the Tennessee Mountain Home where she grew up, as well as performances filmed at a church and various other locations in the Smoky Mountains.

Critical reception

Thom Floyd from AllMusic gave the album two out of five stars. He criticized the album's production as "a bit too slick," but said that Parton's "irrepressible charm" makes it a "reasonably enjoyable holiday record."

Commercial performance

The album debuted and peaked at number 74 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart, spending a total of two weeks on the chart. The album was certified Gold by the RIAA on December 27, 1994.

Personnel

Adapted from the album liner notes.

Additional musicians

Additional background vocals

Production

Other personnel

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Christmas at Home . . August 25, 2020.