Before the Beatles, before transistor radios took over my world, before I learned to tune the dial and find music for myselfโthere were songs that found me. They came through the television, in technicolor harmony, from families and choirs who sang with bright smiles and polished shoes.
Two musical acts stand out from that time: The King Family and Up with People.
The King Family first appeared on The Hollywood Palace in 1964 and shortly after were given their own variety show on ABC. They werenโt edgy or rebellious. They were wholesome, polished, and filled with harmonyโliterally and figuratively. The family was massiveโdozens of members, from toddlers to grandparents, all singing together with glowing sincerity.
To a child growing up in a small town, they didnโt just sound good. They looked like how family was supposed to be. Happy. United. Musical. Safe.
Their renditions of patriotic songs, holiday medleys, and show tunes created a world that felt bright and secureโwhere everything had its place and everyone sang in key. Watching The King Family was like sitting in front of a musical Norman Rockwell painting.
And then there was Up with People.
They came a little later for me, in the mid-to-late 60s, but their message stuck: hope, optimism, togetherness. With their choreographed enthusiasm, multicultural cast, and youth-led performances, Up with People wasnโt just a music groupโit was a movement. Their songs like โUp, Up with Peopleโ and โWhat Color Is Godโs Skin?โ didnโt challenge the system so much as uplift the spirit.
They traveled the world with smiles, songs, and carefully curated joy. And for me, they represented something real: the belief that music could make the world a better place.
Looking back now, I realize that both acts were products of their timeโexpressions of pre-Beatles America, when harmony was literal and cultural, and when the biggest dream was to get along and sing in tune.
But I also recognize something deeper.
Before I ever found music that reflected my inner conflict, I was drawn to music that reflected my longingโfor unity, for belonging, for the sense that everything could work out if only we could all sing the same song.
The King Family and Up with People offered that dream. Not a rebellious soundtrack, but a hopeful one. And for a child just beginning to understand the world, sometimes thatโs exactly what you need.




