Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The accompanying music video for "Hunter" was directed by longtime collaborator Paul White of Me Company and consists of a close-up of a bald Björk as she transforms into a "techno-bear" while singing. Seeking to convey the music's fusion of organic and technological, the polar bear was animated in a non-naturalistic fashion; the bear also ...
"The Other Day I Met a Bear" is one of the songs sung by Barney the dinosaur on the 1990 children's video Campfire Sing-along except it was shortened to 4 stanzas instead of 10. On Barney & Friends, the tune was used for The Exercise Song. The 2007 album For the Kids Three! includes a version of the song by Barenaked Ladies. [3]
"The Bear Song" is a single by American comedy metal band Green Jellÿ. It is based on " The Bear Went Over the Mountain ", an old popular camp traditional song, sung to the tune of "Sipping Cider through a Straw" from 1919.
The Bear Went Over the Mountain" is a campfire song sung to the tune of For He's a Jolly Good Fellow, [1] which, in turn, got its melody from the French tune Malbrough s'en va-t-en guerre (Marlborough is going to war). The public domain lyrics are of unknown origin. Bing Crosby included the song in a medley on his 1961 album 101 Gang Songs.
The song concerns Simon Smith, a young man of modest means who entertains affluent ("well-fed") diners with his dancing bear. Biographer Kevin Courrier has described the song as "the first hint of Newman the outsider looking to entertain the world". [5] Newman has alluded to the bear as a gentile who serves to allow Smith to assimilate. [5]
The moose had managed to escape the bear's clutches and the bear wandered over to a meadow to graze. But that doesn't mean that Larson wasn't shaken by the experience.
Video of a moose getting a little too close for comfort with a man walking in the woods in Maine recently has gone viral for this exact reason. And the man had every reason to be spooked.
"Little Bear" is a song by indie band Guillemots. It was written by Guillemots frontman Fyfe Dangerfield [ 1 ] and is the opening track of the band's debut album, Through the Windowpane (2006). In a radio programme celebrating the 40th anniversary of BBC station Radio 1 , Paul McCartney named "Little Bear" as one of his "all-time favourite songs".