Where Do the Children Play?

"Where Do the Children Play?"
Song by Cat Stevens now known as Yusuf Islam from the album Tea for the Tillerman/Those Were the Days
Released 23 November 1970
Genre Folk rock
Label Island Records
A&M Records (USA)
Writer(s) Cat Stevens (Now known as Yusuf Islam)
Producer(s) Paul Samwell-Smith
Tea for the Tillerman/Those Were the Days track listing
  1. "Where Do the Children Play?"
  2. "Hard Headed Woman"
  3. "Wild World"
  4. "Sad Lisa"
  5. "Miles from Nowhere"
  6. "But I Might Die Tonight"
  7. "Longer Boats"
  8. "Into White"
  9. "On the Road to Find Out"
  10. "Father and Son"
  11. "Tea for the Tillerman"

"Where Do the Children Play?" is a song by British folk-rock musician Cat Stevens, now known as Yusuf Islam. It was the opening track of the album Tea for the Tillerman, released in 1970.[1]

The song reflects awareness of the turmoil of the late 1960s and the issues involved: war, urban sprawl, poverty, ecological disaster, and the future of humankind. The same themes and concerns are repeated later in many of his songs.

The song was used for the soundtrack of the 1971 movie, Harold and Maude. The film features the song during a scene where lead character Harold is driving past a military graveyard, panning out to show a vast number of little tiny white graves, thus underscoring the point of the song.

In 2005, Stevens recorded it with Dolly Parton on the Dolly Parton album Those Were the Days.

The song also featured in the couch gag scene of The Simpsons' episode "Super Franchise Me", with various characters from the show acting out some of the song's messages.

References

  1. "Albums". YUSUF Islam. Retrieved 2012-01-08.


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