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The song, written by Chris Dedrick and produced by Enoch Light, uses kites to symbolize youth, innocence, and memories, describing a group of children, presumably the Dedrick siblings, running, laughing and flying kites in a field far away from their parents because the parents don't realize that kites are fun. On the B-side is a song titled ...
Kites Are Fun is the first album by The Free Design, released in 1967. The group was signed to the Project 3 label after a demo recording that was completed with the assistance of the band's father. [3] The tracks are composed of precise instrumental arrangements with high ranges in complex vocal harmonies. [4]
The Free Design: Kites Are Fun: PR50019SD 1967 Pearl Bailey: The Real Pearl PR50022SD 1967 Jerry Goldsmith: Planet of the Apes (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) PR50023SD 1968 Enoch Light and The Brass Menagerie Enoch Light and The Brass Menagerie PR50036SD 1969
[1] [failed verification] Those early group names aside, their repertory was focused a lot more on the songs of Wilson Pickett, Don Covay, and Otis Redding, than on Howlin' Wolf or Bo Diddley. [1] 'Simon Dupree and the Big Sound' came about in the course of their search for a flashy name. [1]
Time for Timer is a series of seven short public service announcements broadcast on Saturday mornings on the ABC television network starting in 1975. The animated spots feature Timer, a tiny cartoon character who is an anthropomorphic circadian rhythm , the self-proclaimed "keeper of body time."
"Kites" is a ballad written by Hal Hackady and Lee Pockriss. It was first recorded by American country folk-singing trio the Rooftop Singers as their last single in 1967. [2] The song then became a hit for British psychedelic band Simon Dupree and the Big Sound, featuring the three Shulman brothers who later formed the progressive rock band ...
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Kites presented the band "at their most musically abstract and progressive", [2] featuring a larger number of guest musicians than any previous album. Each side here is a long concept piece: side A – Jon Field's side (partly inspired by abstract artist Paul Klee's painting "The Kingdom of the Air", otherwise meaning to convey the sounds of a kite drifting through skies), [1] on side B ...