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"Baby Make It Soon" is a 1969 song by The Marmalade. It was written by Tony Macaulay. The song reached number nine in the UK and number 3 in South Africa.
Anderson performed the song on the final episode of The Brady Bunch Hour. Mary Mason recorded the song in medley with the Marmalade hit "Baby Make It Soon"; introduced on Mason's Angel of the Morning album, the track "Right Time of the Night/Baby Make It Soon" was released as a single in the UK in 1978.
Marmalade released Songs in November 1971, with Nicholson taking over most song compositions, which met with limited success. However, Nicholson penned two of their last hits, "Cousin Norman" (brass arranged by Campbell) and "Radancer", as well as the lesser hit "Back on the Road", on which he sang lead vocal.
Gnome announced their "US Blasphemy Tour" in August 2023, with dates running from September to October. [9] They began by playing at the 2023 Louder than Life Festival in Louisville and hit smaller venues heading west until they wrapped up their tour at Aftershock Festival in Sacramento on October 8th.
By 12 December that year the single had sold a million copies and was awarded a gold disc by the R.I.A.A. [5] The song was written by Tony Macaulay and Geoff Stephens. [6] Despite being released by Pye Records in the band's native UK, the record did not appear on the UK Singles Chart.
"Baby Make It Soon" b/w "Time Is on My Side" 1969 9 — — — 6 — 10 — 3 — "Butterfly" b/w "I Shall Be Released" (from There's a Lot of It About) — — — — — — — — — — "Reflections of My Life" b/w "Rollin' My Thing" (non-album track) 3 47 6 20 2 9 8 13 5 10 Reflections of the Marmalade "Rainbow" b/w "The Ballad of ...
Dean Ford (born Thomas McAleese; 5 September 1945 – 31 December 2018) was a Scottish singer and songwriter best known for his tenure as lead vocalist and frontman of the beat pop group Marmalade from 1966 to 1974.
A folk rock ballad, [2] "Garden Song" was produced by Bridgers herself alongside Tony Berg and Ethan Gruska. [1] The song features a "wave of shimmery synths" and "delicate, crushing vocals", with its lyrics depicting "a scene from a fairytale, one that includes a house resting on a hill with thousands of roses (and probably a few ghosts)". [3]