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The song appears in the film Tromeo and Juliet in a scene in which a family in a car sings a song before getting into an accident. In the following scene, the character Detective Scalus says, "They found a peanut, all right, a peanut of death!" The song also appears at the opening of the opera The Abduction of Figaro by Peter Schickele (P.D.Q ...
Lyrics as published in an 1866 Southern newspaper, [2] humorously listing lyricist as "A. Pinder" (pindar being another word for peanut [1]) and music by "P. Nut". Verse 1. Sitting by the roadside on a summer's day Chatting with my mess-mates, passing time away Lying in the shadows underneath the trees Goodness, how delicious, eating goober ...
"Linus and Lucy" is a popular instrumental jazz standard written by American jazz pianist Vince Guaraldi. It serves as the main theme tune for the many Peanuts animated specials and is named for the two fictional siblings, Linus and Lucy Van Pelt.
"Get 'Em from the Peanut Man (Hot Nuts)" is a dirty blues and hokum song, written and initially recorded by Lil Johnson. [2] The 10-inch shellac disc 78rpm single was released by Champion Records in August 1935.
The song has been recorded more than 200 times, [1] [2] Sales of its sheet music topped 1 million, and it also was the first million-selling 78 rpm recording of Cuban music in the U.S.< [3] "The Peanut Vendor" was inducted into the Latin Grammy Hall of Fame in 2001 and was added to the Library of Congress's National Recording Registry in 2005. [4]
"With the Peanuts movies, I grew up on those specials from the '60s and '70s, that, of course, rerun to this day. I'm very fond of all that Vince Guaraldi music, so what we did was try to find spots in the film where we could sort of touch down and remind people who were watching the film that it's still a Peanuts movie, and there's still a place for that music in the film.
[4] In 1931, Elmira, New York, newspaper the Star-Gazette reported that at a Boy Scout gathering at Seneca Lake, as scouts entered the mess hall, "Troop 18 soon burst into the first camp song, 'John Jacob Jingleheimer Smith'." [5] A 1941 Milwaukee Journal article also refers to the song, with the same alternate title of "John Jacob Jingleheimer ...
The A-Bones, Music Minus Five (1993) Petr Kotvald, Právě tady...Právě teď (2011) The song was covered, with new lyrics by H. B. Barnum and Marty Cooper, under the name of "Peanut Butter" by: The Marathons (The Vibrations) (1961) The Royal Guardsmen (1966) J. Geils Band (1976) Billy Vera and the Beaters (1987) Mary Kate & Ashley Olsen (1992)