Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Mother Goose Club YouTube channel also contains a number of shorter, song-only videos that feature cast members and other performers singing nursery rhymes. [6] [7] Additional content can be found on the Mother Goose Club mobile app in the form of songs, books, games, and videos [6] and on Netflix in the form of a nursery rhyme compilation. [8]
Published by Eliza Lee Cabot Follen in New Nursery Songs for All Good Children. [i] Tinker, Tailor: England 1695 [111] The first record of the opening four professions being grouped together is in William Congreve's Love for Love (1695). To Market, to Market: England 1611 [112] Based upon the traditional rural activity of going to a market or fair.
Black and White is a 1990 postmodern children's picture book by David Macaulay. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company , it received mixed reviews upon its release. It was the recipient of the Caldecott Medal for illustration in 1991.
The Victorian composer Alfred James Caldicott, who distinguished himself by setting several nursery rhymes as ingenious part songs, adapted "Jack and Jill" as one in 1878. These works were described by the Dictionary of National Biography as a "humorous admixture of childish words and very complicated music…with full use of contrast and the ...
As of 20 August 2020, a video containing the song, misspelt as "Johny" and uploaded to YouTube by Loo Loo Kids in 2016, [1] has more than 6.9 billion views as of January 2024, making it the third-most-viewed video on the site, as well as the most-viewed nursery rhyme video and one of the top 10 most-disliked YouTube videos.
Barney & Friends ("Barney is a Dinosaur") – Philip A. Parker; performed by Bob Singleton's Kids' Chorus. ("I Love You" (closing song) – Lee Bernstein; performed by the cast. Barney Miller – Jack Elliott and Allyn Ferguson; The Baron – Edwin Astley; Bat Masterson – Bill Lee; Batman ("Batman Theme") – Neal Hefti
"Three Blind Mice" was used as a theme song for The Three Stooges and a Curtis Fuller arrangement of the rhyme is featured on the Art Blakey live album of the same name. The song is also the basis for Leroy Anderson's 1947 orchestral "Fiddle Faddle". The theme can be heard in Antonín DvoĆák's Symphony No. 9 IV.
"Matthew, Mark, Luke and John", also known as the "Black Paternoster", is an English children's bedtime prayer and nursery rhyme. It has a Roud Folk Song Index number of 1704. It may have origins in ancient Babylonian prayers and was being used in a Christian version in late Medieval Germany. The earliest extant version in English can be traced ...