Peace & Harmony

Album / Title

Peace & Harmony

By: Lisa Lougheed

Origin: Etobicoke, Ontario, 🇨🇦

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10 tracks

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Track Listing

10 tracks

  • Won't Give Up My Music

    Track 1 05:55

  • Whatcha Gonna Do?

    Track 2 04:20

  • You Remain (On My Mind)

    Track 3 05:28

  • Peace & Harmony

    Track 4 05:24

  • Got to be Real

    Track 5 04:20

  • Little Things

    Track 6 05:14

  • Kiss n' Tell

    Track 7 04:32

  • Just Be My Friend

    Track 8 04:05

  • Closer to You

    Track 9 04:15

  • Days of Sunshine

    Track 10 05:47

Insight

Lisa Lougheed is a Canadian singer, dancer, songwriter, and voice actress whose recording career connects two very different corners of Canadian pop culture: the late-1980s CBC animated series The Raccoons and the early-1990s Canadian dance-pop scene. Although her discography is relatively small, her work has had an unusually long afterlife, particularly through “Run With Us,” one of the most fondly remembered Canadian television themes of its era.

Born Lisa Dawn Lougheed in Etobicoke, Ontario, she began performing at an early age. She started tap dancing as a child and later studied dance at the Etobicoke School of the Arts, where her training included ballet, modern dance, and highland dance. While still in high school, she spent summers performing as a lead vocalist and dancer in revue-style productions at Canada’s Wonderland, gaining early professional experience as both a singer and stage performer.

Her first major national exposure came through The Raccoons, the Canadian animated series created by Kevin Gillis. Lougheed was hired as a singer and voice actress while still a teenager, contributing vocals to the program’s soundtrack and voicing Lisa Raccoon. Her signature recording from the series, “Run With Us,” written by Kevin Gillis, Jon Stroll, and Stephen Lunt, became the show’s best-known musical theme. With its dramatic synth-pop arrangement and hopeful chorus, the song eventually outgrew its original television setting, becoming a nostalgic Canadian pop landmark for viewers who grew up with the series.

Lougheed’s debut album, Evergreen Nights, was built around music associated with The Raccoons and released during the original CBC era of the program. The album included “Run With Us,” “Ain’t No Planes,” “Here I Go Again,” “Stop the Clock,” “Don’t Fear the Fire,” “Growing Up,” “All Life Long,” “Hold Back Tomorrow,” and “New World.” Although tied to an animated series, Evergreen Nights has become one of the most collectible Canadian television soundtrack albums of the 1980s, prized by fans of The Raccoons, CBC-related vinyl, and Canadian synth-pop. Its scarcity helped build its reputation over time, especially while much of the series’ original music remained unavailable through regular commercial channels.

The two early Run Records singles are similarly prized. “Run With Us” backed with “Hold Back Tomorrow” appeared in 1987, followed by “Ain’t No Planes” backed with “Growing Up” in 1988. Both singles were connected to CBC Enterprises and the Evergreen Raccoons production world, carrying the same Kevin Gillis and Jon Stroll creative imprint that defined the album. Together, Evergreen Nights and the early Run 7-inch releases form the core collector period of Lougheed’s catalogue.

After The Raccoons, Lougheed continued to work as a performer. In 1989 she was involved with Youth Beat, a Bell Canada-backed anti-drug touring campaign that performed in Ontario communities. She also sang commercial jingles, continued developing demo material, and worked toward a broader recording career beyond television soundtrack music.

That next phase arrived with World Love, released in 1992 through Warner Music Canada. The album repositioned Lougheed as a contemporary dance-pop artist, moving her away from the children’s television context and into the MuchMusic, club remix, and Canadian radio landscape of the early 1990s. Unlike Evergreen NightsWorld Love gave Lougheed a larger role as a songwriter, with most of the album co-written by her. The title reflected an optimistic social message, with songs built around themes of connection, change, and personal empowerment.

World Love produced her most visible mainstream pop period. The title track received national attention, while “Love Vibe” became one of her key dance-pop singles. Its video, directed by David McNally, won Best Dance Video at the 1992 Canadian Music Video Awards, placing Lougheed within the Canadian video culture of the MuchMusic era. The album also included “Love You by Heart” and showed her working in a polished early-1990s pop/dance style that balanced radio accessibility with club-oriented production.

Her third album, Peace + Harmony, followed in 1993. Recorded in several major music centres, including Toronto, New York City, Chicago, and New Jersey, the album pushed further into dance, R&B, and club-pop territory. Lougheed collaborated with a wide group of writers and producers, including Mike “The Hitman” Wilson, David Morales, Christopher Max, Paul Scott, and Shank Thompson. During the album’s development, she reportedly co-wrote a large body of material in a short period, with the final release shaped into a ten-song album.

The key single from Peace + Harmony was “Won’t Give Up My Music,” which became her most important release from this phase. The song extended her dance-pop profile and later received JUNO recognition in the Best Dance Recording category for its club mix. Lougheed toured across Canada to promote the album and remained visible through television appearances, youth-oriented programming, and public events, including Niagara Falls New Year’s Eve broadcasts.

By the mid-1990s, Lougheed’s public recording activity slowed, though her voice continued to surface in other contexts. Her later credited vocal work included appearances connected to major international artists, but she gradually stepped away from the Canadian pop spotlight. Her catalogue remained compact: three albums, several singles, and a handful of recordings that continued to circulate through memory, collectors, and fans of Canadian television music.

Lougheed’s legacy rests on more than nostalgia. Evergreen Nights and the Run Records singles preserve a distinctive late-1980s Canadian synth-pop sound tied directly to CBC animation, while World Love and Peace + Harmony document her attempt to move into the more competitive early-1990s dance-pop world. Few Canadian artists of her era moved so visibly from children’s television soundtrack work into major-label pop, and fewer still left behind a song as enduring in Canadian popular memory as “Run With Us.”

-Robert Williston

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Lougheed, Lisa - Peace & Harmony

Lougheed, Lisa - Peace & Harmony

Peace & Harmony

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Credits

Musicians
Lisa Lougheed: lead vocals; backing vocals; vocal arrangements
David Blamires: backing vocals on 'Won't Give Up My Music'
Johnny Rutledge: backing vocals on 'Won't Give Up My Music'
Shawne Jackson: backing vocals on 'Won't Give Up My Music'
Vivienne Williams: backing vocals on 'Won't Give Up My Music'
Joey Washington: backing vocals on 'Peace + Harmony'; rap and rap writing on 'Little Things'
Terri Jones: backing vocals on 'Peace + Harmony'
Mischke: backing vocals on 'Just Be My Friend'
Marlon Graves: guitar on 'What'Cha Gonna Do?'
William "Spaceman" Patterson: guitar on 'Got To Be Real'
George Wadenius: guitar on 'Days Of Sunshine'
The Paul Shapiro Ensemble: horn section on 'Got To Be Real'
Vern Dorge: saxophone on 'Days Of Sunshine'
Alan Friedman: additional drums on 'Won't Give Up My Music'
Gary Norian: keyboards on 'Won't Give Up My Music'
Peter Schwartz: keyboards on 'Won't Give Up My Music'
Neal Howard: keyboards and programming on 'Won't Give Up My Music'; programming on 'Closer To You'
Andy Marvel: keyboards, programming and vocal arrangements on 'What'Cha Gonna Do?'
Alec Shantzis: keyboards and programming on 'Got To Be Real'
Mervyn Pewett: keyboards on 'Closer To You'
Christopher Max: all instruments and backing vocals on 'Kiss N' Tell'
Darrin and Tone Z: all instruments, programming and vocal arrangements on 'Just Be My Friend'

Songwriting
'Won't Give Up My Music' written by G. Christopher-Wright and M. Wilson
'What'Cha Gonna Do?' written by Andy Marvel and Lisa Lougheed
'You Remain (On My Mind)' written by Lisa Lougheed, Paul Scott, and Shank Thompson
'Peace + Harmony' written by Lisa Lougheed, Paul Scott, and Shank Thompson
'Got To Be Real' written by Cheryl Lynn, David Foster, and David Paich
'Little Things' written by Lisa Lougheed, Paul Scott, and Shank Thompson
'Just Be My Friend' written by Darrin Bowler, Lisa Lougheed, and Tony Azzopardi
'Closer To You' written by Lisa Lougheed and Mike Wilson
'Days Of Sunshine' written by Ed Terry and Lisa Lougheed

Production
Produced by Mike "Hitman" Wilson, Andy Marvel, Paul Scott, Shank Thompson, David Morales, Christopher Max, Darrin and Tone Z, and Ed Terry
Co-produced by Goh Hotoda and Neal Howard on 'Won't Give Up My Music'
Executive producer: Lisa Lougheed
Executive producer and management: Jack Lenz
Executive produced for Water Music Inc.
Produced for World Of Andy Music, Inc.
Produced, arranged and mixed for B.O.P. Entertainment Inc.
Produced and mixed for Def Mix Productions
Produced for TazzDab Productions
Programmed by Mike "Hitman" Wilson, Goh Hotoda, Neal Howard, Andy Marvel, Alec Shantzis, Darrin and Tone Z, and Ed Terry
Engineered by Jim Godsey, "Bonzai" Jim Caruso, Bill Klatt, John Poppo, Tod Levine, Jimmy Godsey, and Richard Oliver
Vocal engineering by Mike Jones
Assistant engineering by "Funky Dread" Julien, Phil Pagano, and Sandy "Get Down" Jenkins
Mix engineering by Dave Darlington, "Bassie" Bob Brockmann, and Kevin Doyle
Recorded by Darrin and Tone Z and Hugh Cooper
Mixed by Mike "Hitman" Wilson, "Bonzai" Jim Caruso, Paul Scott, Shank Thompson, David Morales, Christopher Max, Tony Maserati, and Kevin Doyle
Mastered by Herb Powers
Mastered at The Hit Factory, New York City

Artwork
Art direction and design by M. Martin Sluyter and Pia Nummi
Photography by Dan Couto
Photo art direction by Glen Hanson
Photography and art direction for Photographics
Styling by Deborah Ferguson
Hair by Chazz
Makeup by Voula

Publishing
'Won't Give Up My Music' published by God's Little Publishing Company / Warner-Chappell / Lost In Music
'What'Cha Gonna Do?' published by World Of Andy Music, Inc. / Sony Tunes Inc. / Water Music Inc., administered by Sony Music Publishing
'You Remain (On My Mind)' published by Heavy Time Music / Lost In Music / Tamark Music / House Of Fun Music / Water Music Inc., administered by Sony Music Publishing
'Peace + Harmony' published by Heavy Time Music / Lost In Music / Tamark Music / House Of Fun Music / Water Music Inc., administered by Sony Music Publishing
'Got To Be Real' published by Cotaba Music / Hudmar Music / Butterfly Gong Music
'Little Things' published by Heavy Time Music / Lost In Music / Tamark Music / House Of Fun Music / Water Music Inc., administered by Sony Music Publishing
'Kiss N' Tell' published by Love Generation Music, administered by Sony Tunes Inc.
'Just Be My Friend' published by Warner-Chappell / Water Music Inc., administered by Sony Music Publishing / Lost In Music
'Closer To You' published by Mega Mony Music / Kid Moe Music, administered worldwide by A Song For You / MCA Music / Water Music Inc., administered by Sony Music Publishing
'Days Of Sunshine' published by Terry Place Music, administered by Lost In Music Inc. / Water Music Inc., administered by Sony Music Publishing

Companies
Phonographic copyright ℗ Warner Music Canada Ltd.
Copyright © Warner Music Canada Ltd.
Manufactured by Warner Music Canada Ltd.
Distributed by Warner Music Canada Ltd.
Made by Cinram
Recorded at Sounds Interchange, Toronto, Ontario
Recorded at Battery Studios, New York City, New York
Recorded at Bass Hit Studios, New York City, New York
Recorded at Quad Recording Studios, New York City, New York
Recorded at Streeterville Studios, Chicago, Illinois
Recorded at TazzDab Production House, Toronto, Ontario
Recorded at Metalworks Studios, Toronto, Ontario
Mixed at Sounds Interchange, Toronto, Ontario
Mixed at Battery Studios, New York City, New York
Mixed at Bass Hit Studios, New York City, New York
Mixed at Quad Recording Studios, New York City, New York
Mixed at Streeterville Studios, Chicago, Illinois
Mixed at East Hill Studios, New York City, New York
Mastered at Hit Factory Mastering, New York City, New York

Notes
℗© 1993 Warner Music Canada Ltd.
Manufactured and distributed by Warner Music Canada Ltd.
Booklet note: writing credits are not listed for 'Kiss N' Tell'.
Booklet note: credits are in reverse order for tracks 8 and 9.

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