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  1. Peter William Dawkins (27 November 1946 – 3 July 2014) was a New Zealand record producer and musician, best known for his late-1960s to mid-1970s New Zealand hits and his 1970s productions for Australian-based pop artists, including Dragon, Australian Crawl and Air Supply.

  2. Peter William Dawkins (27 November 1946 – 3 July 2014) was a New Zealand record producer and musician, best known for his late-1960s to mid-1970s New Zealand hits and his 1970s productions for Australian-based pop artists, including Dragon, Australian Crawl and Air Supply.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Pete_DawkinsPete Dawkins - Wikipedia

    Peter Miller Dawkins (born March 8, 1938) is an American business executive and former college football player, hockey player, military officer, and political candidate. Dawkins attended the United States Military Academy, where he played as a halfback for the Army Cadets football team from 1956 to 1958. As a senior in 1958 he won the Heisman ...

  4. The Whole Thing's Started was produced by Peter Dawkins, [3] and was released in July 1977 with Brenton White replaced on lead guitar by Rex Goh. [4] The album spawned the singles "Do What You Do" (June), "That's How the Whole Thing Started" (October) and "Do It Again" (February 1978) but neither album nor singles charted into the ...

  5. The album was recorded in March–April 1981 in Sydney, New South Wales and produced by Peter Dawkins (Air Supply, Billy Thorpe, Dragon, John Farnham). [3] "I was approached by Australian Crawl, who were about to do their second album, Sirocco .

  6. Peter Dawkins may refer to: Pete Dawkins (born 1938), American college football player, military officer, business executive. Peter Dawkins (musician) (1946–2014), New Zealand musician and producer, based in Australia.

  7. 14 de mai. de 2014 · Peter Dawkins with Quincy Conserve at HMV studio in early 1971. From left: Denys Mason, John McCormick, Rufus Rehu, Barry Brown-Sharpe, Dave Orams, Richard James Burgess, and Malcolm Hayman. Seated are Peter Dawkins and engineer Peter Hitchcock. Visible behind Rehu is the top unit of the 4-track Ampex tape recorder.