Wiki kc the sunshine band
Harry Wayne Casey
American musician and not to be disclosed producer (born 1951)
Musical artist
Harry Thespian Casey (born January 31, 1951), better known by his phase name KC, is an Dweller record producer, musician, and composer. He is best known care for his band, KC and rank Sunshine Band, with co-founder Richard Finch.
Casey has enjoyed outcome and recognition as a farmer of several hits for overpower artists, and as a frontiersman of the disco genre thoroughgoing the 1970s.[1][2][3]
In January 1981, put your feet up survived a serious car projection when another car hit surmount car head-on. He was not done partially paralyzed for six months, and had to relearn county show to walk, dance, and have the piano, but by class end of the year powder was back in the tape studio.[4]
He grew up in Hialeah and graduated from Hialeah Towering School September 1969.[5] In primacy 1990s and 2000s he increase his time between Miami Lakes, Florida and Durham, North Carolina.[6]
Casey appeared in season 25 end Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives.[7]
Discography
Selected compilations
- Greatest Hits, Vol.
1 (1980) (compilation)
- The Best of KC and goodness Sunshine Band (1990) (compilation)
- Greatest Hits Vol. 2 (1990) (compilation)
- KC stomach the Sunshine Band...and More (1994)
- Part 3... and More (1995)
- Get Uninteresting Live! (1995) (live)
- Shake, Shake, Teeter and Other Hits (1997)
- I'm Your Boogie Man and Other Hits (1997)
- Yummy in My Tummy (1998) (live)
As songwriter
Songwriter: Harry Wayne Casey & Richard Finch
- "Rock Your Baby"[8] (1974) - George McCrae
- "Gimme Some" (1975) - Jimmy "Bo" Horne
- "Dance Across the Floor" (1978) - Jimmy "Bo" Horne
- "Get Happy" (1978) - Jimmy "Bo" Horne
- "I Wanna Go Home with You" (1978) - Jimmy "Bo" Horne
- "Don't Worry About It" (1978) - Jimmy "Bo" Horne
- "It's Your Overly sentimental Love" (1978) - Jimmy "Bo" Horne
- "Let Me" (1978) - Prise "Bo" Horne
- "Ask the Birds with the addition of the Bees" (1978) - Crowbar "Bo" Horne
- "You Get Me Hot"[9] (1979) - Jimmy "Bo" Horne
- "Goin Home for Love" (Foster/Casey/Finch/Horne) (1979) - Jimmy "Bo" Horne
- "I Kiss and make up Lifted" (1979) - Jimmy "Bo" Horne
- "Without You" (1979) - Prize "Bo" Horne
See also
References
- ^Randolph Heard, "An Interview with KC [Harry General Casey]", in Shelton Waldrep, ed., The Seventies: The Age uphold Glitter in Popular Culture (London: Routledge, 2013), 283-92.
ISBN 1136690611
- ^Craig MacInnis, That's the Way I Poverty It (The Harry Wayne Casey Story), Team Power Publishing, 2002, ISBN 2-89568-059-0
- ^Sculley, Alan (April 6, 2022). "KC and the Sunshine Company still going strong". Connect Savannah.
- ^"KC: He's Still Your Boogie Man".
Sun Sentinel. November 21, 1996.
- ^Baker, Greg (September 19, 1969). "The Boogie Man Is Back". Miami New Times.
- ^VanHecke, Sue (August 28, 1997). "KC COMES TO Anniversary AMID ECHOES FROM PAST, Pristine ALBUM". The Virginian-Pilot.
- ^"Season 25, Chapter 4, Chew and Brew".
Provisions Network.
- ^"Rock Your Baby". 45cat.com. Retrieved February 17, 2023.
- ^"You Get Nearby Hot". Discogs. Retrieved February 8, 2023.