Lyrics by The Kaleidoscope

Do you love The Kaleidoscope's songs? Here you'll find the lyrics to The Kaleidoscope's songs so you can sing them at the top of your lungs, make your own versions, or simply understand them properly.

We have compiled all the lyrics of The Kaleidoscope's songs we could find so that those who, like you, are looking for songs by The Kaleidoscope, find them all in one place.

Find here the lyrics to your favorite songs by The Kaleidoscope.

  1. Beautiful Night
  2. Knives
  3. Kung Fu (feat. Shuttle)
  4. Letters
  5. Move Me
  6. On Again, Off Again
  7. Open Air
  8. The Wind
  9. Tracing
  10. We Felt The Fall
  11. Whale Song
  12. Who Loves

The Kaleidoscope; or, Literary and Scientific Mirror was an English weekly published between 1818 and 1831 by the Liverpool publisher Egerton Smith (1774–1841), who had established the Liverpool Mercury in 1811. The magazine's name was taken from David Brewster's recent invention. The first number appeared on 28 July 1818 in folio form; two years later the publication became an eight-page quarto. The price was kept at threepence-halfpenny throughout the magazine's history. An anonymous writer for the British Quarterly Review suggested that the Kaleidoscope was Britain's first cheap weekly miscellany: "It consisted of slight original and selected articles in literature, science and art, and aimed at that happy combination of instruction and amusement which has since been more elaborately developed in still cheaper serials." Contributors included William and Mary Howitt, and the magazine also inserted the American Washington Irving's Sketch Book. The last number bore the date 6 September 1831. The magazine was being discontinued, Egerton Smith informed his readers, since the new railways had disrupted road distribution by stage-coach.

You might not be a big fan of The Kaleidoscope, maybe you're here for just one song by The Kaleidoscope that you like, but take a look at the rest, they might surprise you.