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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".
"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.
The Peppermint Trolley Company was an American sunshine pop band known for their 1968 single "Baby You Come Rollin' 'Cross My Mind", their performances on Mannix and The Beverly Hillbillies, and their arrangement and performance of original theme song for The Brady Bunch.
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.
Hutsell, who was a Saturday Night Live featured player from 1991 to 1993 and a main cast member from 1993 to 1994, starred in a Chicago production of The Real Live Brady Bunch in 1990, and once ...
The Brady Kids is an American animated television series and a spin-off based on the ABC live-action sitcom The Brady Bunch, produced by Filmation in association with Paramount Television. [2] It aired on ABC from September 9, 1972, to October 6, 1973, and also spun off another Filmation series, Mission: Magic! , starring Rick Springfield .
HGTV purchased the iconic 'Brady Bunch' home and transformed it into a real-life version of the 1970s set. Skip to main content. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways ...
"Girl" is the 8th single by British singer/actor Davy Jones, written by Charles Fox and Norman Gimbel. It is not Jones' most successful single ("Rainy Jane", peaking at 52 on Billboard Hot 100, number 32 on Cash Box [1] and number 14 in Canada), [2] but his most remembered one, appearing in The Brady Bunch episode "Getting Davy Jones" and again in The Brady Bunch Movie.