The “Golden Hits Of The 70s”
Main MenuConcept Refinement The Author..Wayne JancikGolden Age Of The 50sGolden Age Of The 60s1970s and There After
MAC & KATIE KISSOON
“CHIRPY CHIRPY CHEEP CHEEP”
(Harold Stott)
ABC 11306
No. 20 October 2, 1971
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Jerry “Mac” Kissoon and his younger sister Kathleen were born in Port of Spain, Trinidad. The Kissoon
family moved to England in the late ’50s. Mac did some solo singing and eventually joined a couple of West
Indian youths, Lance Ring and Pauline Sibbles, in the Marionettes. After Katie joined the group, a number
of singles produced by Britain’s ’50s pop star Marty Wilde were issued in Europe by Pye. In 1965, while
still a member of the group, Katie, recording as Peanuts, covered the Bonnie & The Treasures hit-free
classic “Home of the Brave.” That same year, the siblings also recorded a few girl-group sides with the
Rag Dolls. None of these charted in England or the States.
Years later, freed of all solo and group alignments, Mac and Katie finally scored in the U.S. with their bub
blegum number, “Chirpy Chirpy Cheep Cheep”–reportedly a well-veiled anti-war tune. While years of
follow-ups charted on the continent, the Kissoons returned to oblivion in the States. “Sugar Candy Kisses,”
“Don’t Do It Baby,” and other cute pop-soul numbers became big U.K. sellers in the mid-’70s.