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The Kids from the Brady Bunch is the third studio album by American pop group the Brady Bunch.It was released on December 4, 1972, by Paramount Records. [1] Two songs on the album, "It's a Sunshine Day" and "Keep On", were featured on season 4, episode 16 of The Brady Bunch, "Amateur Nite".
The Brady Bunch recorded four albums in the early 1970s on Paramount Records: Merry Christmas from the Brady Bunch, Meet the Brady Bunch, The Kids from the Brady Bunch and The Brady Bunch Phonographic Album. There were also various solo singles and a duet album by Christopher Knight and Maureen McCormick.
"Time to Change" was released as The Brady Bunch's second single, with "We Can Make the World a Whole Lot Brighter" as the B-side. The record did not chart.. The original recording of "Time to Change" is on their greatest hits album, It's a Sunshine Day: The Best of the Brady Bunch, and a re-recorded version was released on the soundtrack to A Very Brady Sequel.
Henderson was the last of the "Brady Bunch" adults to pass away: Robert Reed died in 1992, Ann B. Davis in 2014 and showrunner Sherwood Schwartz in 2011.
50 years after his voice cracked on national TV, Christopher "Peter Brady" Knight sang onscreen again — but admits, "There's some scars there, left from music."
The Brady Bunch is an American sitcom created by Sherwood Schwartz that aired five seasons from September 26, 1969, to March 8, 1974, on ABC.The series revolves around a large blended family of six children, with three boys and three girls.
The Brady Bunch depicted the story of a widowed father of three boys and a single mother of three girls who marry with hopes of living in perfect harmony under one roof. It starred Robert Reed ...
Meet the Brady Bunch is the second studio album by American pop group the Brady Bunch.It was released on April 17, 1972, by Paramount Records. [1] Two songs on the album, "We Can Make the World a Whole Lot Brighter" and "Time to Change", were featured on season 3, episode 16 of The Brady Bunch, "Dough Re Mi".