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This song has also been covered by Canadian country singer Brad Johner. The Longest Johns covered the song as "The Last Bristolian Pirate", with some of the lyrics and geographical references changed to British equivalents along the River Severn. The Scottish metal band Alestorm covered the song on their 2024 EP Voyage of the Dead Maurader.
Hindsight 20/20 is a greatest hits compilation album by the Canadian comedy music group The Arrogant Worms. [1] The album consists of twenty songs spanning the band’s twenty-year career and a dance remix of "The Last Saskatchewan Pirate."
Music videos: 24: The Scottish heavy ... Charts Certifications UK AUT [1] GER [2] US Heat. US ... "The Last Saskatchewan Pirate" Niek van de Vondervoort [57] References
The band refer to themselves as "True Scottish Pirate Metal" [2] [83] and are identifiable by the pirate-themed lyrics in their songs. [3] [70] Alestorm's music utilizes the upbeat epic style of Scottish folk metal and power metal. [70] Album recordings feature heavy use of real trumpets, trombones, accordions synths, fiddle and tin whistle ...
Like previous Alestorm albums, Curse of the Crystal Coconut has been described as pirate metal, [7] [8] [9] power metal, [10] folk metal, [9] heavy metal, [11] and hard rock. [12] In a review of the album, Exclaim! considered "Treasure Chest Party Quest," "Fannybaws" and "Pirate's Scorn" "[to have] some of the hookiest choruses in the band's catalogue."
A part of the song contains Alestorm's rendition of the Pirates of the Caribbean theme. "Wolves of the Sea" and "Leviathan" are re-recorded tracks which previously appeared on the Leviathan EP. "P is for Pirate" is a comedy a capella track based on the Sesame Street song C Is For Cookie that is only available on the iTunes version of the album ...
A chord chart. Play ⓘ. A chord chart (or chart) is a form of musical notation that describes the basic harmonic and rhythmic information for a song or tune. It is the most common form of notation used by professional session musicians playing jazz or popular music.
Seventh Rum of a Seventh Rum has been described as pirate metal, [3] power metal, [3] folk metal, [4] and symphonic metal. [3] According to Dom Lawson of Blabbermouth.net, the song "Come to Brazil" is a "snotty, punk-metal two-minuter," and "Cannonball" is obscenity-filled whereas "Wooden Leg (Part III)" "is as sweetly melancholy as it is preposterous."