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The cover for Off the Deep End parodies the famous cover of Nirvana's album Nevermind, which depicts an infant in the deep end of a pool chasing after a dollar bill on a fishhook. [22] The Off the Deep End cover shows Yankovic in the baby's place apparently swimming to catch a doughnut on a string. While the Nirvana cover has a fully nude baby ...
Released in April 1992, Yankovic's seventh studio album Off the Deep End helped revitalize his career after a decline in commercial success in the late 1980s, [12] peaking at number 17 on the Billboard 200, [7] earning a platinum certification from the RIAA, [5] and producing the Billboard top 40 hit "Smells Like Nirvana". [8]
Locations in the song come from the book Roadside America by Doug Kirby. "Bite Me" Off the Deep End (1992) The "noise" song appears as a hidden track on most CD releases. It starts playing after ten minutes of silence at the end of the "You Don't Love Me Anymore" track. Inspired by Nirvana's hidden track on Nevermind. "Bob"
She came to wide notice when the vocals for her song "Deep End" were used on a hit song by rapper Sleepy Hallow in 2020. She released her RCA Records second extended play Time Machine in June 4, 2021, and has collaborated with multiple artists including Vince Staples, [5] Lil Wayne, James Blake, Steve Lacy, Lil Yachty and Lil Uzi Vert. [6]
"Deep End Freestyle" is a song by American rapper Sleepy Hallow and American singer Fousheé. It was released on April 3, 2020 by Winners Circle Entertainment, and is the lead single from his mixtape Sleepy Hallow Presents: Sleepy for President (2020). [1] [2] Produced by Great John, the song features a sample of "Deep End" by Fousheé. [3]
Off the Deep End: 8 "My Bologna" [24] 2:01 "My Sharona" by The Knack: The narrator talks about his obsession with bologna sausage. [24] "Weird Al" Yankovic: 9 "Taco Grande" [15] 3:44 "Rico Suave" by Gerardo Mejía [15] About a narrator's visit to a fictional Mexican restaurant. Cheech Marin does a brief Spanish monologue in the song. [7] Off ...
“The End,” by director Joshua Oppenheimer (“The Act of Killing,” “The Look of Silence”), is a gloomy musical about perhaps the only six people left on Earth: an oilman and his trophy ...
Lee Aaron is the fourth studio album by the Canadian rock singer Lee Aaron, released on February 17, 1987 through Attic Records; [2] a remastered edition was reissued in 2002 through Unidisc Music. [3]