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Rocky Mountain Holiday is a television special and a soundtrack album of songs from the special, performed by American singer-songwriter John Denver and The Muppets.The show has Denver playing host to the extended Muppet family; he takes them up into the scenic Rockies for an excursion that includes fishing, hiking, and camping.
In performances, Chin plays an acoustic guitar with only one string, using the body of the guitar as percussion. [3] [1] [2]Luciano Blotta, who met Chin while in Jamaica shooting his 2007 documentary Rise Up, used his song "Chicken in the Corn" in the soundtrack of the movie. [2]
As the title indicates, the folk comedy duo were singing the songs "straight" (well, "Almost"). Like the B-side of their second album, Two Sides of the Smothers Brothers, the recording was done in a studio instead of on stage. The album cover shows Tom standing with his guitar and Dick sitting on a stool with his bass lying behind him.
The music video for "Chow Down (at Chick-fil-A)" was directed by Michael Serrato. [3] Serrato is a writer for the Neil's Puppet Dreams , in which Willam has appeared. [ 8 ] RuPaul's Drag Race pit crew member Jason Carter appears in the music video. [ 9 ]
In the film The Wizard of Gore there is a show that opens with "The Geek" (played by Jeffrey Combs) eating maggots and then biting the head off a rat. [ citation needed ] In the first two episodes of American Horror Story: Freak Show , there is a geek named Meep (played by Ben Woolf ) who performs in the Freak Show biting heads off of baby ...
"The Chicken Song" is a novelty song by the British satirical comedy television programme Spitting Image (series 3, episode 6). The nonsensical lyrics were written by Rob Grant and Doug Naylor ; the music was written by Philip Pope , who also produced the song, with Michael Fenton Stevens & Kate Robbins as vocalists.
The bouncy chorus ended with the words "Go, you chicken fat, go!" [1] [2] The song was originally recorded on a Warner Bros. Pictures soundstage in early 1962 at the same time as the recordings for the soundtrack of the Warner Bros. musical film The Music Man, starring Robert Preston. Recorded on the same three-track 35mm magnetic film as the ...
An entirely different arrangement of "Chicken Man" was also used as the theme to early series of the British quiz show Give Us a Clue, despite the fact that it was already being used on Grange Hill. It lasted as the theme tune from 1979 until 1981, when a new producer/director commissioned an entirely new theme tune.