Friday, November 27, 2009

Weekend Listomania (Special Four Legs Good Edition)

Well, it's Friday and you know what that means. Yes, my Oriental [insert your own outlandish double entendre here -- I'm all out] Fah Lo Suee and I will be heading for my local Hell Octaplex where we plan to set the record for most consecutive viewings of The Twilight Saga: New Moon. Dunno about you guys, but I just can't get enough of a movie about vampires not fucking.

As a result, posting by moi will be sporadic for a couple of days at least.

But in the meantime, here's a fun little project for us all:

Most Memorable Post-Beatles Song Referencing Members of the Animal Kingdom in the Title or Lyrics!!!

No arbitrary rules, you're welcome very much, and I just checked and, yes, I did an animal list last year. But since I've lost countless brain cells since then I'm reasonably sure my choices this time will be totally different.

Oh, and if you try to sneak a band named after an animal into the list I will come to your house and kill you. I'm serious about this. Also: I don't care if it's approaching the Christmas season, but if anybody nominates that "Grandma Got Run Over By a Reindeer" thing they're similarly dead.

And my totally top of my head Top Six are:

6. Al Wilson -- The Snake




"You knew I was a snake before you brought me in." You gals know the feeling, I'm sure.

5. The Fools -- Psycho Chicken



When this came out in 1980, I remember thinking it was a long-overdue skewering of David Byrne's pretentious anxiety attacks. In retrospect, it's basically just a sort of sophmoric Weird Al record, which is to say only moderately amusing or smart, and I'm somewhat more forgiving of Byrne's neuroses.

4. Bruce Springsteen -- Pretty Flamingo




A great song, obviously, but I've been looking for an excuse to post this particularly gorgeous 1975 live version (from the Roxy bootleg) for ages. You're welcome.

3. The Killers -- Neon Tiger



As noted last week, I'm not nuts about this band but I always like to include something recorded during the current century. In any case, these guys seem to have replaced Billy Corgan's pretentious cueball noggin as my go-to weekly injoke.

2. The Hollies and Peter Sellers-- After the Fox




Even Burt Bacharach's joke songs are gorgeous. Seriously, that piano-riff-with-the-vocal-hisses is just a killer hook, isn't it?

And the numero uno post-Fab Four ode to those below us on the food chain obviously is --

1. Gilda Radner -- Let's Talk Dirty to the Animals



Written by the late great comic genius Michael O'Donoghue. I mentioned this over at Box Office last week, but the movie of which this is the opening number -- Gilda Live -- is finally out on DVD and can be ordered here. Cheap, I might add.

Alrighty, then -- what would your choices be?

[Shameless blogwhore: And speaking of Box Office, my parallel Cinema Listomania -- theme: best and worst film-to-tv or tv-to-film adaptations -- is now up. As always, if you could see your way to going over there and dropping a little snark, it would help justify my ridiculously exorbitant freelance rate to management. Thanks!]

40 comments:

  1. "Gitsrzan": "Let's hear it for the monkey!"

    Oh, and Major Lance and "Monkey Time".

    And just for the hell of it: "King Kong Reggae" by Todd the Mod.

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  2. Of course, there's Tonio K. and I Handle Snakes - "One man lays down 10%, another man trembles and quakes / I save my money; I handle snakes". From Romeo Unchained.

    More Tonio K. - Doggytown, an "Amerika" outtake on the "Rodent Weekend" collection.

    From Richard Thompson's excellent "Sweet Warrior", how about the rollicking Bad Monkey?

    And from Pete Townshend, the unutterably lovely Greyhound Girl; I don't know where to find a studio version, but he played it (with 12-string guitar) both nights of the 2001 benefit shows at the La Jolla Playhouse, which are available from his web site.

    (word verification: woefr)

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  3. On to fish:

    "Porpoise Song" by the Monkees (kind of a two-fer).

    Speaking of two-fers, Country Joe and the Fish: "Porpoise Mouth"

    "Too Many Fish in the Sea" by Martha and the Vandellas.

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  4. Another entry from the Ray Stevens songbook: "Harry the Hairy Ape".

    And who can forget "White Bird" by It's a Beautiful Day?

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  5. More monkey songs:

    "Everybody's Got Something to Hide 'cept for Me and My Monkey" by the Fab Four.

    "Monkey Man" from the Specials.

    "Monkey to Man" by Elvis the C.

    Side question: is the monkey the most popular animal in rock music?

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  6. "Wild Horses" by the Stones.

    "Horse Latitudes" by the Doors.

    "Up on Cripple Creek" by the Band ("She bet on one horse to win, and I bet on another to show...")

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  7. How about "Bird Song" by Lene Lovich? Incidentally, my wife and I had the DJ play "Psycho Chicken" at our wedding reception instead of "The Chicken Dance."

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  8. My favorite part of "Psycho Chicken" was where they sing "What the cluck!?!"

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  9. For animal songs, here's the Pink Floyd edition, starting with:

    The whole of Animals: "Pigs On The Wing", "Dogs", "Pigs (Three Different Ones)", "Sheep"

    "Lucifer Sam" (that cat's something I can't explain)

    "Seamus" (that's the dog, Steve Marriott's to be exact)

    "The Dogs of War"

    "Several Species of Small Furry Animals...."

    "Breathe" (Run, Rabbit, Run)

    I'm sure there's a few others I'm leaving out, but I have to leave now.

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  10. I'll take "Love Me Like A Reptile" by Motorhead.

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  11. The Phantom Creep11/27/2009 8:18 AM

    The Kinks -- "Phenomenal Cat."

    And I can't believe nobody's mentioned "The Birds and the Bees" by Jewel Aikens.

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  12. A pregnant topic indeed:
    Two-Headed Dog: Roky Ericson
    Three-Legged Cat: Red House Painters
    Feeling the Elephant: Bill Lloyd
    The Talking Animals: T-Bone Burnett
    A Chicken With its Head Cut Off: Magnetic Fields
    Chicken Strut: The Meters
    Cold Night For Alligators: Roky Ericson
    Lone Rhinoceros: Adrian Belew
    Bluebird: Buffalo Springfield
    Hyena: R.E.M
    Needles in the Camel's Eye: Brian Eno
    Reptile: The Church
    Nice Weather For Ducks: Lemon Jelly
    Ride a White Swan: T-Rex

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  13. hasil adkins did an entire album-poultry in motion:the hasil adkins chicken collection. it includes everything from the chicken walk to chicken on the bone. RIP hasil adkins.

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  14. There's a song called "Lone Rhinosceros"?

    Truly, I have now heard everything.
    :-)

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  15. Big Electric Cat - Adrian Belew
    Do The Dog - Specials
    Ride My Llama - Neil Young
    Monkey Wash, Donkey Rinse - Warren Zevon
    No More Buffalo - James McMurtry
    Can Your Pussy Do The Dog? - Cramps

    (And I'll always love Nick Lowe's "Marie Prevost" with its timeless "she was a winner/who became a doggie's dinner" refrain.)
    - bill buckner

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  16. I cannot be the first person to mention 'Piggies' by the Beatles.

    I mean, really.

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  17. Adrian Belew went all animalistic on his first solo LP, yep, "The Lone Rhino," piggybacking (oops, couldn't help it) atop of his pachyderm squalling on King Crimson's "Elephant Talk" with songs imitative of rhinos, the aforementioned "Big Electric Cat" and even a made-up creature called a momur. He gave up the animal schtick in subsequent solo efforts. I guess he didn't want to get pigeonholed. (doh!)

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  18. Didn't the Who have a b-side called "Dogs"? b/w "Call Me Lightnin'"

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  19. Yep. One of their funnier throwaways, actually.

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  20. Tigers don't go out on rainy nights
    They've no need to whet their appetites
    Hunting tigers out in Indi-ah!

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  21. "Tigers don't go out on rainy nights
    They've no need to whet their appetites"
    Reminds me of the divine "Tiger Nights" by the Bongos

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  22. Animal Songs, special Neko Case edition:

    Outro with Bees, from Blacklisted
    Maybe Sparrow
    Lion's Jaws
    and the title tune, from Fox Confessor Brings the Flood
    People Got A Lotta Nerve
    Magpie to the Morning
    and I'm an Animal, from Middle Cyclone

    plus, bonus Primate Round

    Apeman and
    King Kong by the Kinks

    Is She Really Going Out With Him? by Joe Jackson
    opening with the immortal "Pretty women out walking with gorillas down my street..."

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  23. Kitty's Back -- Bruce Springsteen
    Hungry Like A Wolf -- Duran Duran
    Evidently Chicken Town - John Cooper Clarke
    Thank Ya Fer Lettin me be Mice Elf Again - Sly & The Family Stone
    Horses- Patti Smith

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  24. Okay, Kitty's back and the Sly mice song....?

    I'll harm you.......!!!!!!!!!
    :-)

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  25. I've got a monkey playlist on my iPod (my nine-year-old loves it). Some samples:

    Monkey in the Middle & What Makes the Monkey Dance-- both Chuck Prophet

    Monkey Around-- Delbert McClinton

    Punish the Monkey-- Mark Knopfler

    Shock the Monkey-- Peter Gabriel

    Monkey with a Gun-- The Yayhoos

    Monkey with a Gun is about Hank Williams, Jr. It's kind of mean, but he deserves it.

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  26. Does Ray Davies' "Animal" count?

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  27. Gummo said...
    I cannot be the first person to mention 'Piggies' by the Beatles.

    I mean, really.


    And of course "I Dig A Pony", "Blackbird", "And Your Bird Can Sing", and "Rocky Raccoon".

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  28. Steve, I can't believe you didn't mention "A Salty Dog" by Procul Harum.

    As for Ray Davies: "Apeman" by the Kinks!

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  29. "Will the Wolf Survive?" -- Los Lobos
    "Boris the Spider" -- The Who
    "Walkin' the Dog" -- Rufus Thomas
    "Bluebird" -- Buffalo Springfield
    "Doggin' Around" -- Jackie Wilson
    "Ride Your Pony" -- Lee Dorsey
    "Mickey's Monkey" -- Miracles
    "Cat in the Window" -- Petula Clark
    "Mockingbird" -- Go Inez!
    The Bird's the Word -- Rivingtons
    Rockin' Robin -- Bobby Day
    The Fish -- Bobby Rydell
    "Why Do Fools Fall in Love" ("Why
    do birds sing so gay...")
    "I'm So Lonesome I Could Cry"(there
    are a limited number of references to whippoorwills in songs)

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  30. And in honor of Mrs. Gummo, let me mention Stevie Nicks's "Edge of Seventeen" ("Just like a white-winged dove..." which for years I thought was a one-winged dove) and "Rhiannan" (like a cat in the darkness).

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  31. The Springsteen song is actually from his show at the Tower in Philadelphia on 12/31/75.

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  32. Glenn said...
    The Springsteen song is actually from his show at the Tower in Philadelphia on 12/31/75.


    I stand corrected. I knew it was from sometime in '75, though.

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  33. OK & so coming in at No. 2 in the waterfowl category: My baby’s got the most deplorable taste, but her biggest mistake is hanging over the fireplace … the kinks, ladies ‘n gennelmen, the kinks.

    And at number 1, if the river was whiskey, I was a diving duck, from you-name-it infinite number of blues-based rock songs, most famously in what, Hesitation Blues by everybody & Rollin’ & Tumblin by everybody.

    In the Orca Whale and Owl categories, the lovely to my eye Regina Spector & Hotel Song.

    And finally, I’ll take two for Dylan’s Dangerous Felines:

    “Oh, the hours I've spent inside the Coliseum, dodging lions and wastin' time” from When I Paint My Masterpiece, and

    All Along the Watchtower, where somewhere off in the cold distance a Wild Cat did growl.

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  34. Beatles: "Martha My Dear"
    "Hey Bulldog"
    "Blackbird"
    "Blue Jay Way"

    The two saddest cat songs in history are both by the Weakerthans: "Plea From a Cat Named Virtue" and the sequel "Virtue the Cat Explains Her Departure."

    Jane Siberry: "Everything Reminds Me of My Dog"

    Robyn Hitchcock's "Bass" (every fish reference you could think of)

    And of course the Bobs: "Get Your Monkey Off My Dog."

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  35. Not ONE of you hippies is going to give it up for "Shannon?" I mean, really...
    - bill buckner

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  36. Bill, maybe he'll find an island with a shady tree...

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  37. Rick Dees & The Disco Duck ?

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  38. How about The Bees with "Chicken Payback"? It's a fabulous song and has an excellent video.

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  39. Oh, and ABBA with "Kong Kong Song." Great stuff.

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  40. Oops. That's "King Kong Song."

    (Today's verification: "diticals". I so want that to become a real word.)

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