Hello! The Osmond Brothers
Hello! The Osmond Brothers is an album released by The Osmonds in 1970.[1] Most songs were recorded in Japanese, and some were recorded in English. The album was released in Japan. Four singles were released from the album. Chitchana Koibito, Young Love Swing, Movin' Along and Chance.[2] The single, Chitchana Koibito, (which means "My Little Darling" in Japanese) was sung by Jimmy and reached No. 1 on the Japan charts. The album was released about a month before they signed with MGM Records.
Hello! The Osmond Brothers | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | September 1970 | |||
Genre | Pop, bubblegum pop | |||
Label | Denon | |||
Producer | Denon Orchestra | |||
The Osmonds chronology | ||||
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Singles from Hello! The Osmond Brothers | ||||
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Track listing
No. | Title | Writer | Length |
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1. | "Golden Rainbow" | W. Marks | 1:59 |
2. | "Keep the Customer Satisfied" | Paul Simon | 2:20 |
3. | "Open up Your Heart" | Mike Curb | 4:51 |
4. | "Raindrops Keep Fallin' on My Head" | Hal David, Burt Bacharach | 2:41 |
5. | "Bridge over Troubled Water" | Paul Simon | 4:32 |
6. | "Chitchana Koibito (My Little Darling)" | M. Nakayama, K. Inoue | 3:20 |
7. | "Young Love Swing" | Yumiko Seki | 3:39 |
8. | "Movin' Along" | Alan Osmond, Merrill Osmond | 2:26 |
9. | "Chance" | H. Aso, K. Inoue | 2:27 |
10. | "Sha La La" | G. Go | 2:46 |
11. | "Scarborough Fair" | Simon & Garfunkel | 3:08 |
12. | "Aquarius/Let the Sunshine In" | James Rado, Gerome Ragni, Galt MacDermot | 3:43 |
Charts
Chart (1970) | Peak position |
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Japanese Albums (Oricon)[3] | 23 |
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gollark: In a market, if people don't want kale that much, the kale company will probably not have much money and will not be able to buy all the available fertilizer.
gollark: You can just hand out what some random people think is absolutely *needed* first, then stick the rest of everything up for public use, but that won't work either! Someone has to decide on the "needed", so you get into a planned-economy sort of situation, and otherwise... what happens when, say, the community kale farm decides they want all the remaining fertilizer, even when people don't want *that* much kale?
gollark: Planned economies, or effectively-planned-by-lots-of-voting economies, will have to implement this themselves by having everyone somehow decide where all the hundred million things need to go - and that's not even factoring in the different ways to make each thing, or the issues of logistics.
gollark: Market systems can make this work pretty well - you can sell things and use them to buy other things, and ultimately it's driven by what consumers are interested in buying.
References
- Hello! The Osmond Brothers
- The Osmonds 1970 Timeline
- Oricon Album Chart Book: Complete Edition 1970-2005. Roppongi, Tokyo: Oricon Entertainment. 2006. ISBN 4-87131-077-9.
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