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The second appearance is at the Festival of Fools, where he acts as the Lord of Misrule, or master of ceremonies, sings "Topsy Turvy," a dance number that explains that it is "the day we do the things that we deplore on the other three-hundred-and-sixty-four." It is also during this song that he crowns Quasimodo the "King of Fools."
The series takes place on a "higgledy-piggledy" prehistoric planet and follows the antics of a little mischievous cave girl called Igam Ogam and her friends, who's more curious than a Curiosaurus is back in a brand-new series of prehistoric adventures with her friends Roly the monkey, you can't stop evolution and now there are new creatures on Igam Ogam's topsy-turvy planet.
NGC 1313 (also known as the Topsy Turvy Galaxy [2]) is a field galaxy [3] and an irregular galaxy [4] discovered by the Scottish astronomer James Dunlop on 27 September 1826. [5] It has a diameter of about 50,000 light-years , or about half the size of the Milky Way .
Topsy-Turvy, a 2002 album by The Apex Theory; Topsy Turvy (Guitar Shorty album), a 1993 album by Guitar Shorty "Topsy Turvy", a song from the 1996 film The Hunchback of Notre Dame. Topsy Turvy, a video in the Disney Sing-Along Songs series; Topsy Turvy (Young Fresh Fellows album), a 1985 album by Young Fresh Fellows
Topsy Turvy (Black Top, 1993) Get Wise to Yourself (Black Top, 1995) Blues Is All Right (Janblues, August 27, 1996) Billie Jean Blues (Collectables, August 27, 1996) Roll Over, Baby (Black Top, 1998) I Go Wild! (Evidence, 2001) Watch Your Back (Alligator Records, 2004) The Best of Guitar Shorty: The Long and Short of It (Shout! Factory, June 2006)
Thursday will be a great day to get outside and take advantage of the warmth and dry weather, forecasters say. "People will be shedding winter coats for shorts and t-shirts," Pydynowski said.
In The World Upside Down in 16th-Century French Literature and Visual Culture, [3] Vincent Robert-Nícoud introduces the mundus inversus by writing (p. 1): . To call something ‘inverted’ or ‘topsy-turvy’ in the sixteenth century is, above all, to label it as abnormal, unnatural and going against the natural order of things.
PopMatters described Topsy-Turvy as "an energy-filled fusion of progressive and modern rock." [4] The MTV News writer Jon Wiederhorn wrote that "the Apex Theory's multi-textured music [...] combines metal, prog-rock, Mediterranean music and even jazz. And the off-kilter rhythm, skittering drums, whirlpool guitars and aggressive vocals of 'Shhh ...