I only ever knew of a few of "Weird Al" Yankovic's songs. There was "The Saga Begins" which is sung in the style of "American Pie" and tells the story of the movie Star Wars - Phantom Menace. And a couple of others. I always found them very funny, especially the lyrics. So the other day, I visited Deezer to find the above-mentioned songs, and guess what? I came up with hordes. So here are the ones that are sung as parodies. What follows is a streaming media player that'll play the parody playlist, and the lyrics of the songs below that. Click on the song's name to see its lyrics. Believe me, they're hilarious. :)
P.S. I'll post the lyrics widget shortly. It isn't currently working as desired. In the mean time, you'll find most of the lyrics here:
Smells like Nirvana
The Saga Begins
Eat It
Pretty Fly for a Rabbi
I Love Rocky Road
Amish Paradise
eBay
Fat
Livin' in a Fridge
Money for Nothing - Beverly Hillbillies
I Can't Watch This
Achy Breaky Song
Bedrock Anthem
Cavity Search
Gump
Like a Surgeon
Ode to a Superhero
Theme from Rocky XIII
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music. Show all posts
Sunday, February 03, 2008
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Real Guitar Heroes
Sumit sent me a link to a YouTube video of a guy playing the most difficult song on PS2's Guitar Hero 3. It's Dragonforce's
Through The Fire And Flames.
So I'm going to put the videos up here. Watch them in sequence to get an idea of the about of skill required for both of them:
Both the videos blew away my mind so. Pay special attention to the solo after 3:02 in the second video [drool].
Through The Fire And Flames.
So I'm going to put the videos up here. Watch them in sequence to get an idea of the about of skill required for both of them:
Both the videos blew away my mind so. Pay special attention to the solo after 3:02 in the second video [drool].
Tuesday, May 01, 2007
G3 Live Videos
I was looking on youtube for G3 videos, and I found this one. Simply awesome. It raises a sense of wonder, just to look at the three of them wiggling their fingers like there's no tomorrow. That too with a song like "Smoke on the water". We all know how the original solo goes. Now listen to this:
Sunday, December 17, 2006
Yellow Submarine
For a long time, I didn't like The Beatles. They weren't real rockers, I'd say. The first 'Boy Band', was the epithet that I handed out to them. All that changed when I first heard "Norwegian Wood". Then other stuff started making sense, and I picked up other old bands like CCR. Rolling Stones still sucks, by the way. Wannabes...
And I used to publicly decry The Beatles, and (may I say it in the same breath?) even Bob Dylan. And at some time, quite recently, new age bands like Linkinpark.
The point of all this being?
No one's ready to debate with with me about exactly what it is that they like about the stuff that is trance (Rap, R&B etc. people still allude to singing).
I'm not saying that I'd listen to it with a dispassionate mind. I'm heavily opinionated. But, I'm also old. Older at any rate.
I happen to have a set of criteria for music. Essentially the same old classical stuff. Meter, notes, chords, lyrics, mood, and of course, lastly the tune. Debating the tune of a song is as insulting as talking about the syntax of a language, grammatical correctness of written communication, the smoothness of a spirit, the truthfulness in a relationship, the taste (not flavour) of food... it is a forgone conclusion.
Beats per minute? I know of human percussionists who can do more BPMs than the ear can tell apart.
I remember a short story by a popular author, a sci-fi thingi, that talked about a Utopian society. It was a society where all aggression was weeded out. Some poor fellow finds some Dylan songs (in print), and causes a revolution. And it's believable. I believe Trance can't do that.
It can't make people think.
That's the difference between good rock songs and great rock songs. Great rock songs make you think.
And this is the dissertation that I can't seem to make when I'm with my friends who listen to trance. I can't get them to make comparisons between the two, along the kind of arguments that I've posed just now.
Now, I shall go ahead and undo the entire dissertation by saying that there is such a thing as free will.
There is such a thing as free will. And people are free to chose, at least in this country, last time I heard, what kind of music they want to listen to.
It still makes a nice drunken conversation, if you are willing to entertain me. Like all other drunken discussions, it is guaranteed last and have no result in sight.
And in case you're wondering about the title of this post, what I've dared to talk about makes it amply clear...
Maybe my opinions should've been darker?
And I used to publicly decry The Beatles, and (may I say it in the same breath?) even Bob Dylan. And at some time, quite recently, new age bands like Linkinpark.
The point of all this being?
No one's ready to debate with with me about exactly what it is that they like about the stuff that is trance (Rap, R&B etc. people still allude to singing).
I'm not saying that I'd listen to it with a dispassionate mind. I'm heavily opinionated. But, I'm also old. Older at any rate.
I happen to have a set of criteria for music. Essentially the same old classical stuff. Meter, notes, chords, lyrics, mood, and of course, lastly the tune. Debating the tune of a song is as insulting as talking about the syntax of a language, grammatical correctness of written communication, the smoothness of a spirit, the truthfulness in a relationship, the taste (not flavour) of food... it is a forgone conclusion.
Beats per minute? I know of human percussionists who can do more BPMs than the ear can tell apart.
I remember a short story by a popular author, a sci-fi thingi, that talked about a Utopian society. It was a society where all aggression was weeded out. Some poor fellow finds some Dylan songs (in print), and causes a revolution. And it's believable. I believe Trance can't do that.
It can't make people think.
That's the difference between good rock songs and great rock songs. Great rock songs make you think.
And this is the dissertation that I can't seem to make when I'm with my friends who listen to trance. I can't get them to make comparisons between the two, along the kind of arguments that I've posed just now.
Now, I shall go ahead and undo the entire dissertation by saying that there is such a thing as free will.
There is such a thing as free will. And people are free to chose, at least in this country, last time I heard, what kind of music they want to listen to.
It still makes a nice drunken conversation, if you are willing to entertain me. Like all other drunken discussions, it is guaranteed last and have no result in sight.
And in case you're wondering about the title of this post, what I've dared to talk about makes it amply clear...
Maybe my opinions should've been darker?
P.S. The lyrics are here.
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