But it was a reasonable success in the US, especially with
kids, and sure enough it wasn’t long before someone had the genius idea of
pushing the young cast (and their TV parents) in to a recording studio. After
all, the same thing had worked wonders for the Partridge Family.
First up was the reasonably safe A Very Brady Christmas, issued in 1970. The kids combo Christmas
caterwauling is reasonably listenable – although once they head off to do a
solo, as Bobby Brady did with his version of The First Noel or
little Cindy did with Frosty the Snowman
(included below) the result is particularly disturbing. The poor girl sounds
positively petrified. 1972’s Meet the Brady Bunch is an offensive
little collection, with pop classics American Pie and Badfinger’s brilliant Day After Day crucified by the kids. This was followed the same
year by The Kids from the Brady Bunch, a horrifying record that
includes a ghastly big band version of the Beatles’ Love Me Do. The album is mostly made up of original songs
written specifically for the kids, including the terrifying You Need
That Rock 'N Roll (included here) and Merry-go-Round, but also includes a rather unpleasant cover of
Michael Jackson’s ode to his pet rat Ben.
The parents were back for their final outing, the 1973
collection The Brady Bunch Phonographic Album which, for the most part, is actually quite a listenable bubblegum pop
album, but there would be no more, although actors Chris Knight (Peter Brady)
and Maureen McCormick (Marcia Brady) did issue an album, funnily enough titled Chris
Knight & Maureen McCormick (also in
1973). The following year the show was cancelled and that was that.
A few TV specials (one produced by Sid and Marty Krofft,
another concentrating on the Brady girls’ marriages) would follow and, in the
90s a brace of po-mo films brought the Bradys (this time portrayed by different
actors) back in to the public consciousness. But nothing can compare with the
originals - and here, for your delectation, are four cuts that prove the fact.
Enjoy!
Apologies - it looks like there's a copyright infringement on posting the other two songs here. Never mind - here are links to them on YouTube (where, apparently, copyright issues do not apply)
The Brady Bunch was very popular here in Australia - there was an episode where the children appeared on a local talent show to earn some money. Here is "Keep on Movin'", complete with matching tops and pants:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dUyTZlJnRns