Rooster_Ties Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 Post examples of ANY kind -- of parody. and/or discuss... First example: Sesame Street Special Report - Cookiegate (Muppet parody of the Iran-Contra scandal, from a 1988 prime time pledge drive special) Next!!! Quote
kinuta Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 Got to mention The Rutles. The quality of music is quite something. They really captured the essence of you know who. http://jp.youtube.com/watch?v=297zDxqzUJo Quote
BillF Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 Parody in jazz: Johnny Dankworth's "Experiments With Mice" which parodies Benny Goodman, Stan Kenton, Gerry Mulligan, etc. Quote
The Magnificent Goldberg Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 I've always had a great affection for Ferlin Husky's "Enormity in motion", a send-up of Johnny Tillotson's "Poetry in motion". This has the original version, followed by Husky's (under the name of Simon Crum). http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=C8lpDAFUfYE MG Quote
The Magnificent Goldberg Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 I also like Stan Freberg. Here's a send up of Les Paul & Mary Ford's "The world is waiting for the sunrise" http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=Bo-nOFyHDow And "The old payola roll blues". Freberg really HATED Rock & Roll. My friend and I used to mime to this as our party piece back in 1960. I was Clyde Ankle, he was Freberg. http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=JOY6-fttd3Y MG Quote
The Magnificent Goldberg Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 In my view, this is the greatest comedy record of all time. Once heard, never forgotten. This is the record: http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=7EgPSBs12OU And here's a video version, introduced by the composers. http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=xLongUBPm5Y MG Quote
rockefeller center Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 http://jp.youtube.com/watch?v=DzR6c0MXnw8 Quote
Alexander Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 Post examples of ANY kind -- of parody. and/or discuss... First example: Sesame Street Special Report - Cookiegate (Muppet parody of the Iran-Contra scandal, from a 1988 prime time pledge drive special) Next!!! Brilliant! Ah, for the days when Henson and Oz were actually involved in Sesame Street... Quote
Alexander Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 Got to mention The Rutles. The quality of music is quite something. They really captured the essence of you know who. http://jp.youtube.com/watch?v=297zDxqzUJo LOVE the Rutles. Neil Innes really got the sound of the Beatles in his music for the film. In the clip you posted, during the line "Anytime of the day I can see..." he really sounds like John Lennon! Quote
Alexander Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 Got to mention The Rutles. The quality of music is quite something. They really captured the essence of you know who. http://jp.youtube.com/watch?v=297zDxqzUJo This song, "Cheese and Onions," sounds so much like the real thing that it apparently even fooled some Beatles fans and wound up on bootlegs. Cheese and Onions Quote
Christiern Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 (edited) I always loved the Hoffnung festival and PDQ Bach Here's a bit of And let us not forget Anna Russell . I love her routine, but I guess she was best known for her take on the Wagner ring. Edited November 14, 2008 by Christiern Quote
sidewinder Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 (edited) Whicker Island (Note the Bahamas by the way - looks like Studland Bay, Dorset with some plastic plants) Edited November 14, 2008 by sidewinder Quote
Larry Kart Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 Joe Goldberg's parodies of various jazz critics (especially Whitney Balliett) in a Jazz Review piece was right on target and damn funny. Thought I'd posted it here once but can't find by searching and don't feel like typing it all in again. Quote
Ken Dryden Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 Go to National Banana dot com and view the parody of the Cialis television commercial, starring Cuba Gooding. They also have Senator Larry Craig in a claymation music video and a terrorist soap opera called Sands of Passion. Quote
paul secor Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 Joe Goldberg's parodies of various jazz critics (especially Whitney Balliett) in a Jazz Review piece was right on target and damn funny. Thought I'd posted it here once but can't find by searching and don't feel like typing it all in again. Here it is: This may have come up here before, but one of the funniest and most accurate parodies I've ever read is Joe Goldberg's of Whitney in a piece Goldberg wrote for The Jazz Review back '59 or '60, reprinted in the book "Jazz Panorama." The setup is that two previously unknown musicians (read Ornette and Don Cherry) have just cropped in NYC, trumpeter Ansel Jones and pianist Porter Smith. The Jones-Smith Duo, get it? "Much of Ansel's life in music," Goldberg writes,"is explained by his instrument, a strange, ungainly copper trumpet. All his life, Ansel had wanted to become a serious composer, and had saved his pennies so some day he might attend to Juilliard School of Music. The day after his application to Juilliard had been refused, Ansel walked calmly into the metal working shop at high school, carrying the pennies he had been saving. Without a word, he tossed them into one of the huge cauldrons there. By night he had melted them down and had forged from the molten copper a trumpet. "He and pianist Porter Smith form the entire group. Naturally, their exclusion of the conventional rhythm section raised several questions, and for the answer to those, we turned to Porter Smith, who can be more articulate about his music than can Ansel. 'We don't need no rhythm,' he said." There follows imaginary responses to the duo's music on the part on such critics as Ralph J. Gleason (it begins: "I like this group, and anybody who doesn't had just better not ever talk to me again, that's all"), Gene Lees ("I'm not as friendly with Ansel Jones as I am with Quincy and some of the other guys..."), Martin Williams ("It is impossible to write about the music of Ansel Jones without using the word 'artist'....), etc. Here is the Balliett parody in full: "Ansel Jones, a thin, diffident young man who resembles a twelve-stringed lute placed on its end at an angle of seventy-three degrees, is getting music from his self-smelted horn that may radically change the shape of jazz. In a typical solo, he will start with a sort of agonized laziness, as if he were awakening from a dream caused by eating too much welsh rarebit the night before, and then, in the third chorus, he will, in a series of short, splatting notes that give the effect of a catsup bottle hit once too often on its end, abruptly switch into a fast tempo that belies the furry bumbling that preceded it. All this time, his pianist, Porter Smith, lays down a firm, inky foundation that anticipates the leader's meanderings with the precision of a seeing eye dog weaving its way through a Coney Island beach crowd on the Fourth of July. In one composition, 'Duplicity,' the two men hit the same note simultaneously midway through the second bridge, and it had the shattering emotional impact of two old friends meeting by chance after years of aimless wandering." Quote
paul secor Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 How 'bout Homer and Jethro? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=73Ja6_A8XpE...feature=related Quote
danasgoodstuff Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 How 'bout this 'un from Ira Gitler's notes to Lee Morgan's The Rajah: Next up is The Rajah by Morgan, some eastern funk in the manner of the Silverstan where the Horajah rules. Mobley levitates above the swaying-elephant beat --one foot in the howdah, so to speak; Morgan, as the head mahout, prods, punches and trills out his earthy lyricism; and Walton shows he has bathed in the holy, blues waters. Then Lee and Hank trade chorueses that will heat up the inside of your turban and send it spinning around on your head. Intentional self-parody? I sure hope so... Quote
BillF Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 How 'bout this 'un from Ira Gitler's notes to Lee Morgan's The Rajah: Next up is The Rajah by Morgan, some eastern funk in the manner of the Silverstan where the Horajah rules. Mobley levitates above the swaying-elephant beat --one foot in the howdah, so to speak; Morgan, as the head mahout, prods, punches and trills out his earthy lyricism; and Walton shows he has bathed in the holy, blues waters. Then Lee and Hank trade chorueses that will heat up the inside of your turban and send it spinning around on your head. Intentional self-parody? I sure hope so... Very Gitler indeed! He always was fond of "Horace mines a vein of Silver", etc! Quote
kinuta Posted November 14, 2008 Report Posted November 14, 2008 Got to mention The Rutles. The quality of music is quite something. They really captured the essence of you know who. http://jp.youtube.com/watch?v=297zDxqzUJo This song, "Cheese and Onions," sounds so much like the real thing that it apparently even fooled some Beatles fans and wound up on bootlegs. Cheese and Onions Indeed. Listen to this take of 'Cheese & Onions'. Quite remarkable. http://jp.youtube.com/watch?v=l6HWOSyaTJI&...feature=related Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.