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The most familiar version of the song is: [5] Knees up Mother Brown Knees up Mother Brown Under the table you must go Ee-aye, Ee-aye, Ee-aye-oh If I catch you bending I'll saw your legs right off Knees up, knees up don't get the breeze up Knees up Mother Brown. Other less common variations include: 'Ee-aye Ee-aye, don't get a bree-aye'
"34" is a song by the Dave Matthews Band, featured as an instrumental piece on their debut studio album, Under the Table and Dreaming. The song was inspired by and written for Miguel Valdez, a percussionist who collaborated with the band in 1992 and died of hepatitis in 1993. [2]
"Under" is a song by English singer-songwriter Alex Hepburn. It was released on May 17, 2013 as the lead single from her debut album, Together Alone . Track listing
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The band originally recorded the song with lyrics, but they were removed from the final album cut. The album's title comes from a lyric of the song "Ants Marching": "[He] remembers being small / playing under the table and dreaming". The album was dedicated to Matthews' older sister Anne, who was killed by her husband in 1994 in a murder–suicide.
"Under the Tree" is a song by English singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran, featured in the 2024 Netflix and Locksmith Animation film That Christmas. The song was released as a non-album digital single in the United Kingdom on November 26, 2024 by Gingerbread Man Records. [1] Sheeran wrote and produced the song with Johnny McDaid.
In universe, the song is also themed to be "Mikasa's song", [11] in contrast to SiM's previous single "The Rumbling", which focused primarily on the show's protagonist Eren Yeager. [6] The song's cover art also depicts Mikasa who has taken off a red scarf that Eren gave her when they were children, [ 1 ] symbolizing a rift taking place between ...
The first known example of this meme, a redub of A-ha's "Take on Me", was posted on YouTube by Dustin McLean in his now-defunct channel Dusto McNeato, in October 2008. [7] [8] McLean, who worked on the animated SuperNews! show on Current TV, stated that the idea for literal videos came about from an inside joke with his fellow workers, [8] and that two of his coworkers along with his wife ...