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"The Pushbike Song" | ||||
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Single by The Mixtures | ||||
Released | December 1970 | |||
Recorded | 1970 | |||
Genre | Bubblegum pop | |||
Label | Polydor (UK); Fable (AUS) | |||
Songwriter(s) | Idris and Evan Jones | |||
Producer(s) | David Mackay | |||
The Mixtures singles chronology | ||||
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"The Pushbike Song" is a song originally recorded by Australian band The Mixtures and released in 1970. The single was a chart success, reaching numbers one and two in the Australian and UK charts respectively. It has subsequently been covered by various artists.
Written by brothers Idris and Evan Jones, "The Pushbike Song" was released in 1970 and reached the top-spot for two weeks in the Australian charts in March 1971. It also proved popular in the UK, reaching the number two spot on 31 January (beaten by George Harrison's "My Sweet Lord"), and number 31 in Canada. [1]
As Will Hodgkinson has pointed out, the song is essentially Mungo Jerry's In the Summertime with similar but different lyrics. The Mixtures had previously had a hit with a version of In The Summertime in Australia. [2] (Mungo Jerry subsequently covered The Pushbike Song in 1990).
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A music video was created for the song in 1970, which depicted the band and friends (including the model Monica Hughes) riding bicycles through the streets of Melbourne. Filmed in black and white, it was notable for scenes involving a procession of bicycles (including a penny farthing) and rollerskaters on a busy six-lane Melbourne arterial road, and a scene of four members of the band 'riding' a tandem bicycle atop a car transporter travelling at speed across the King Street Bridge (Melbourne).
The song was used in a sketch by Paul Hogan on The Paul Hogan Show , which parodied the promotional film, and featured cast member and 1976 Miss World pageant runner up Karen Pini [14]
Cilla Black performs a version of the song as part of her "Cillagram" segment on her Surprise! Surprise! television show, season 2, episode 4 which aired on ITV, 11th November 1984. [15]
Australia's Young Talent Time also performed the song in a 1986 episode.
Australian children's show Play School recorded a cover for the album There's a Bear in There , sung by Philip Quast.
Australian singer-songwriter Olivia Newton-John recorded a cover for the soundtrack of the 2011 comedy film A Few Best Men .
In 2012, "The Pushbike Song" was used on an advertising campaign for Tooheys 5 Seeds Cloudy Cider. The vocals on that version are purportedly a performance by "gypsy banjo player, Benny 'The Giant' Gogasa" recorded via Skype. [16] This is probably a spoof on the part of the advertising agency, for what appears to be a local studio recording, with no independent evidence that Benny 'The Giant' Gogasa and "his band of orphans, misfits and mildly deformed gypsy musicians" actually exists.
It was also heard in the Hotch Potch House episode "Round and Round" during a film from the garden door of the model house about a girl getting a new bike.
"Me and Bobby McGee" is a song written by American singer-songwriter Kris Kristofferson and originally performed by Roger Miller. Fred Foster shares the writing credit, as Kristofferson wrote the song based on a suggestion from Foster. A posthumously released version by Janis Joplin topped the Billboard Hot 100 in 1971, making the song the second posthumously released No. 1 single in U.S. chart history after "(Sittin' On) The Dock of the Bay" by Otis Redding. Gordon Lightfoot released a version that reached number 1 on the Canadian country charts in 1970. Jerry Lee Lewis released a version that was number 1 on the country charts in December 1971/January 1972 as the "B" side of "Would You Take Another Chance on Me". Billboard ranked Joplin's version as the No. 11 song for 1971.
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"In the Summertime" is the debut single by British rock band Mungo Jerry, released in 1970. It reached number one in charts around the world, including seven weeks on the UK Singles Chart, two weeks at number one on the Canadian charts, and number three on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in the US. It became one of the best-selling singles of all-time, eventually selling 30 million copies. Written and composed by the band's lead singer, Ray Dorset, while working in a lab for Timex, the lyrics of the song celebrate the carefree days of summer. The track was included on the second album by the band, Electronically Tested, issued in March 1971.
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The Mixtures were an Australian rock band that formed in Melbourne in 1965.
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