Kush | |
---|---|
Origin | Australia |
Years active | 1973–1975 |
Labels | Ivy League Records |
Website | Warner Bros. Records, RCA |
Kush were Australian rock band in the early 1970s. They released two studio albums.
Title | Album details | Peak chart positions |
---|---|---|
AUS [1] | ||
Presents Snow White... And the Eight Straights |
| 24 |
Nah,Tellus Wh't Kush Means Yer Great Sausage |
| - |
Year | Title | Peak chart positions | Album |
---|---|---|---|
AUS [1] | |||
1973 | "Peter Gunn" / "The Sky Is Falling" | 43 | non album single |
"Wait" / "Can't You Hear Me Calling" | - | Presents Snow White... And the Eight Straights | |
1974 | "Easy Street" / "All Right in the City" | 48 | |
1975 | "Banana Song" (with Geoff Duff) | - | non album single |
"Macarthur Park" / "Klue" | - | non album single | |
"I'm Your Football" / "Out of My Tree" | - | Nah,Tellus Wh't Kush Means Yer Great Sausage | |
Dekadance is the title of two different collections of remixes by Australian rock group INXS: a 1983 four-track 12" and cassette EP released in the United States of songs from Shabooh Shoobah; and a 1985 seven-track cassette released in Australia of songs from The Swing. The latter included a cover version of "Jackson" as a duet by INXS' Michael Hutchence with Jenny Morris, their backing singer. This compilation peaked at No. 2 on the Australian Kent Music Report Albums Chart in April 1985.
The Kent Music Report was a weekly record chart of Australian music singles and albums which was compiled by music enthusiast David Kent from May 1974 through to January 1999. The chart was re-branded the Australian Music Report (AMR) in July 1987. From June 1988, the Australian Recording Industry Association, which had been using the top 50 portion of the report under licence since mid-1983, chose to produce their own listing as the ARIA Charts.
This is a list of official recordings by The Monkees.
"Knock, Knock Who's There?" is a song written and composed by John Carter and Geoff Stephens. It was originally sung and recorded by the Welsh singer Mary Hopkin and was the United Kingdom's entry at the Eurovision Song Contest 1970, where it came second. The single version was produced by Mickie Most and reached No. 2 on the UK charts.
David Cyril Kent is an Australian music historian and pop culture writer. Kent produced the Kent Music Report, compiling the national music chart from May 1974 to 1996; it was known as the Australian Music Report from 1987. The music reports were a weekly listing of the National Top 100 chart positions of singles and albums. Kent's music reports were used by Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) as its official ARIA Charts from mid-1983 until July 1988 when ARIA developed an in-house chart.
"Just Like Fire Would" is a song by Australian alternative rock band, the Saints, which is written by the band's lead singer, Chris Bailey, and was released as a single in March 1986. It was the lead single from their seventh studio album, All Fools Day, and peaked at No. 29 on the Kent Music Report Singles Chart. It was produced by Hugh Jones, who had co-produced the album with Bailey. AllMusic's John Dougan reviewed All Fools Day and opined, "One listen to songs as grabbing as 'Celtic Ballad' or the great 'Just Like Fire Would' will convince you that despite the differences, the new Saints were a good band for completely different reasons than the old Saints."
"Wedding Ring" is a song written by Stevie Wright and George Young. It was originally recorded by the Australian rock group the Easybeats in 1965, whose version reached #6 on the Australian charts.
"April Sun in Cuba" is a song recorded by New Zealand group Dragon, released in October 1977. It is the first single to be released from Dragon's fourth studio album Running Free. "April Sun in Cuba" first charted on 7 November 1977, peaking at number 2 on the Kent Music Report Singles Chart and staying on the chart for 22 weeks. It also reached number 9 on the New Zealand singles chart.