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It began with a song that almost wasn’t theirs. In 1970, The Osmond Brothers — a clean-cut family act from Utah — were still trying to find their sound in a world ruled by Motown and The Beatles. Then came “One Bad Apple,” a funky, infectious tune originally intended for The Jackson 5. When the song landed in the hands of The Osmonds instead, it changed everything — and Donny Osmond, then barely a teenager, suddenly found himself at the heart of a pop revolution.
Donny recalls the moment vividly: the excitement of recording, the uncertainty of stepping into a new sound, and the shock when the song shot straight to No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. Overnight, The Osmonds were no longer just a family act — they were America’s first true boy band phenomenon, inspiring the kind of hysteria that teenage fans would later show for groups like New Kids on the Block or *NSYNC.
What made “One Bad Apple” so powerful wasn’t just its catchy beat — it was the innocence and energy that The Osmonds brought to it. Donny’s youthful voice carried both charm and confidence, bridging pop and soul with surprising authenticity. Behind the smiles and matching suits was a family who worked tirelessly, often sleeping on buses and performing in small towns long before fame arrived.
Looking back, Donny says the song “opened the door to everything” — TV shows, gold records, and the global tours that followed. But more than that, it gave them a musical identity: wholesome yet exciting, polished yet full of heart. “One Bad Apple” didn’t just make The Osmonds famous — it defined an era, proving that sometimes, the right song at the right moment can turn a dream into history.