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Pave The World/F.O.R.D. 10-inch Picture Disc (1996) Blue Meanies/MU330 Split 7-inch (1998) Blue Meanies/Alkaline Trio split 7-inch picture disc (1999) Compilations. Take Warning: The Songs of Operation Ivy (Glue Factory, 1997) Magnetic Curses: A Chicago Punk Rock Compilation]' (Thick Records, 2000 re-released 2007) Skanarchy (Elevator Music, 2000)
The Blue Meanies; their Chief, recognizable by long rabbit-like ears, is caressing the Dreadful Flying Glove. The Blue Meanies are the main antagonists in the surreal 1968 Beatles animated film Yellow Submarine. They are a fictional army of disagreeable beings that abhor all music, allegorically representing all the bad people in the world. [1]
In Womack's description, in the sequence for the song, the Beatles "vanquish the evil Blue Meanies and celebrate as the colorful beauty of friendship and music have been restored to Pepperland". [ 91 ] [ nb 9 ] Author George Case describes the same victory scene as "a psychotropic cartoon dreamscape" and an example of the Beatles' more overt ...
Blue Meanies, The Orange, Straitjacket Fits, Bike Musical artist Andrew Mark Brough (pronounced / b r ĘŚ f / ; [ 1 ] 7 May 1963 – 2 February 2020) was a singer, songwriter and guitarist from Dunedin , New Zealand.
Heffron was noticed by Raven and Stevie Richards at a Steel City Wrestling show in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and was asked by Raven to become Richards' sidekick in ECW.He went on to become "The Blue Meanie", taking his name and persona from the villains of the 1968 animated film Yellow Submarine, [3] in 1995 in ECW at the November To Remember event.
Ringo's Yellow Submarine was a 60-minute weekly radio show hosted by Ringo Starr, airing on the ABC Radio Network, starting from June 4, 1983, with the last show airing on November 26, 1983. [1]
"Only a Northern Song" plays over a scene when the yellow submarine travels through the Sea of Science, [35] [84] during the Beatles' quest to free Pepperland and the imprisoned Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band [78] from the music-hating Blue Meanies. [85] The recording was slowed down by a semitone for inclusion in the film. [57]
The U.S. cover contained a fictitious illustrated biography by Dan Davis of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, in which the ensemble's battle with the Blue Meanies was compared to three other epic struggles in the history of the English-speaking world: Beowulf's struggle to save the Heorot mead hall, King John's signing of the Magna Carta ...