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"The Salmon Dance" is a song by English electronic music duo the Chemical Brothers and is the seventh track on their 2007 studio album We Are the Night. It features vocals by Fatlip and was released as the second single from the album on 10 September 2007. [ 1 ]
The song is best known for its chorus, " 'Eezer Goode, 'Eezer Goode / He's Ebeneezer Goode", the first part of which is phonetically identical to "Es are good" – 'E' being common slang for the drug ecstasy. [3] However, 'E' is also sung many other times during the song, ostensibly as ' e (i.e. he), such as in "E's sublime, E makes you feel ...
"Dashing Away with the Smoothing Iron", a traditional English folk song written in the 19th century about a housewife carrying out one part of her linen chores each day of the week "Monday's Child", a traditional English rhyme mentioning the days of the week; Solomon Grundy (character), DC Comics character named after the rhyme
A video made by University of Southern California student Jon Salmon was created in December 2007 as a student assignment and uploaded to YouTube the following month. The video features fellow students Abby Fuller and Rafael Pulido lip-syncing to the song and frequently cuts to various clips from other YouTube videos featuring people dancing.
The song "The Red and the Black", with lyrics referencing the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, is a re-titled, re-recorded version of "I'm on the Lamb But I Ain't No Sheep" from the band's eponymous debut album. The song was later covered by the Minutemen and Band of Susans.
Ask The Fish is a live album by Leftover Salmon originally released in 1995. It was reissued once in 1997 by Hollywood Records, and again in 2001 on Bert Records.The album was recorded live at the Fox Theatre in Boulder, Colorado, on October 28 and 29, 1994.
The singer of "Will to Love" imagines himself to be a salmon swimming upstream to mate and struggling to survive. [4] [8] He sings that "I'm a harpoon dodger/I can't, won't be tamed." [3] Village Voice critic Robert Christgau says that Young "turns into a salmon while masturbating in front of the fireplace."
Fish Rising was released on April 11, 1975 on Virgin Records. It was a surprising success, peaking at number 33 on the UK charts, [6] which was better than any Gong album. . This success, compounded by Daevid Allen's abrupt departure from Gong on the day before the album's release, encouraged Hillage to leave the band by the end of 1975 and begin a proper solo career with no Gong-associated ...