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Kim Wayans transformed the track into “My Songs Are Mindless,” a dig at the seemingly nonsensical lyrics of the original, implying that consumers will love anything as long as the beat is good. 4.
The song was the first track of a 1979 comedy album, Primeval Slime by actor Ying Tong John. [7] The song gave its name to the 2008 stage show Ying Tong: A Walk With the Goons. [8] The Muppets also did a cover version of the "Ying Tong Song" in season 5, episode 20 of The Muppet Show.
A nonsense song is a type of song written mainly for the purpose of entertainment using nonsense syllables at least in the chorus. Such a song generally has a simple melody and a quick (or fairly quick) tempo and repeating sections.
This feeling of being "poisoned and brainwashed" by the song is referred to by the term doku-denpa (毒電波, "poisonous electromagnetic waves"). Denpa songs often contain lyrics that are nonsensical or contain otaku-related themes. Common themes include delusions, telepathy or insanity, and often, such songs contain chaotic or repetitive ...
The demonic rock song, which was shared alongside a video of a doll’s reflection in a mirror, features fuzzy bass, howling vocals and nonsensical lyrics. “Like a cannonball, like a volleyball ...
Discussing the song, the band's website states, "With its chiming pedal steel chorus breaks and seemingly nonsensical lyrics, the song entered into the realms of novelty hit. It's a happy little ditty about strange people and their individual idiosyncrasies, with pretty melodies laced throughout and punctuated by trademark moments of crunching ...
"Shiny Shiny" is a 1983 new wave song by the British pop band Haysi Fantayzee. It is an anti-nuclear war song with humorous, nonsensical lyrics about war, politics, and violence, among other issues, which includes instruments such as a piano, fiddles, violins, and spoons, along with audio sound effects, loops, and a bouncy country music-like beat.
The song "Swinging the Alphabet" is sung by The Three Stooges in their short film Violent Is the Word for Curly (1938). It is the only full-length song performed by the Stooges in their short films, and the only time they mimed to their own pre-recorded soundtrack. The lyrics use each letter of the alphabet to make a nonsense verse of the song: