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Later, his wife said she was looking forward to having toast the next morning, and he started improvising a song about toast while playing a bongo. [9] Heywood frequently appears on the nationally syndicated radio program The Bob and Tom Show. His most popular and widely known song is called "Toast", played on a toaster with a pair of forks.
After six months in San Diego, McGee returned on July 10, 1995, to his former job on The Bob & Tom Show. [20] Dave Wilson filled in for Chick at first [21] and then Gunner filled in for the rest of Chick's absence. Steve Allee is the show's music director. He has co-produced more than 50 Bob & Tom albums over the past 25 years. [22]
From 1996 to 2012, KSHE aired The Bob & Tom Show in morning drive time, syndicated from WFBQ in Indianapolis. [8] The current wake-up program is "The A.D. Show" with A.D. Rountree and station veteran John Ulett. KSHE created a virtual museum on its website for its long-time fans. The site contains video clips, audio clips, pictures and memorabilia.
However, "Toast" received heavy airplay from Kenny Everett on Capital Radio and this led to the sides being flipped and "Toast" being released as the A-side a month later. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Helped by the airplay, the song became successful, peaking at number 18 on the UK Singles Chart in November. [ 4 ]
The song bears a resemblance to, and is perhaps influenced by, the W. H. Auden poem As I Walked Out One Evening, including sharing the same iambic meter and quatrain form. [6] The first line also bears resemblance to the folk song Lolly Tudum , which begins "as I went out one morning to breathe the pleasant air", popularized in the New York ...
The song was written by Dylan and produced by Bob Johnston. Commentators often interpret it as a parody of the Beatles' 1965 song "Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)". John Lennon [a] composed "Norwegian Wood" after being influenced by the introspective lyrics of Dylan. Lennon later reflected on his feelings of paranoia when Dylan first ...
Fall Out Boy’s “We Didn't Start the Fire” remakes Joel’s boomer-centric song with millennial/Gen Z-targeted lyrics about notable pop-culture events that took place between 1989 and 2023.
Billboard described this version as an "exciting rouser from the pen of Bob Dylan with an outstanding performance by the trio." [5] Cash Box described it as "a rhythmic, fast-moving bluesy ditty on warm-hearted somewhat euphoric theme." [6] Record World called it "a moving Bob Dylan song" and that there is "joy, joy, joy in [the trio's] voices ...