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"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. [1] The song then became a hit for British psychedelic band Simon Dupree and the Big Sound, a group of the Shulman brothers, who went on to form the progressive rock band ...
"Kite Song" 1973 Approximately Infinite Universe - [4] "Kurushi" • 1995 Rising - [10] "Leaving Tim" 2013 Take Me to the Land of Hell - [1] "Left Turn's the Right Turn" 1992 Onobox: Recorded in 1973 for Feeling the Space but did not make the final tracklist. First released in 1992 on Onobox and later included on 2017 reissue of Feeling the Space.
Twelvefour (marketed as twelvefour) is the second album by Australian band The Paper Kites, released on 28 August 2015 by Wonderlick Entertainment and Sony Music Australia. [5] [6] The album's release was preceded by lead single "Electric Indigo", released on 19 June 2015. [7] Its video, directed by Matthew J Cox, was released on 13 July. [8]
States is the debut studio album by Australian indie folk band, the Paper Kites. The album was released on 1 August 2013 in Australia and 1 October 2013 in North America. [4] [5] [6] The album peaked at number 17 on the ARIA Charts. It was supported by The Paper Kites Australian tour across August and September 2013. [1]
It should only contain pages that are The Paper Kites songs or lists of The Paper Kites songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Paper Kites songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Kites was released in a second international English-language version as Kites: The Remix, [2] "Presented By" Brett Ratner, recut by his regular editor, Mark Helfrich, with new music by Graeme Revell [16] using remix techniques developed in the series Kung Faux. [17]
Pages in category "The Cyrkle songs" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. ... Kites (song) R. Red Rubber Ball; T. Turn-Down Day
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 ...