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Monica :: musical parlor game
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This is fauxklore's fault. :-)

There is a parlor game called Encore, in which the object is to sing a portion of a song containing the challenge word. You have to include at least eight consecutive words (including the challenge word) for it to count. What makes this fun for the challenger (in this case, me) is to try to come up with words that aren't found in a lot of songs. (And where I fail in that, maybe I'll learn about some previously-unknown music. :-) ) I promise that I have not used any language-analysis or statistical tools in assembling this list (which I mention because I used to work for a company that did such things).

You are, of course, supposed to do this from memory, not via Google or your music collection. Let's keep this Google-free to start and we'll see what happens.

Rules: Use the challenge word as the subject of your comment, and use the comments to include your snippet of lyrics + citation. I will award 1 point each for lyrics, name of song, and source (performer, author, name of show for soundtracks, broad categorization if you think it's anonymous, etc, as appropriate). If you come up with a snippet from a song other than the one I had in mind, I'll give a bonus point. I reserve the right to award other bonus points for any extraordinary cleverness I think deserves them. Winner just gets bragging rights, unless I get organized enough to actually come up with small prizes or something. (Physical mail is my bane...) Contest is open until everything's identified or this goes three days without additional guesses.

None of the words are in the titles of the songs I have in mind. All of the songs are primarily in English (loosely speaking). Capitalization and punctuation in challenge words matter. I used a different source for each song on this list, but some performers on this list do covers of other songs on this list. All songs were at one time available in published sources. These are all songs I enjoy listening to. A few of these should be insanely easy, but a couple are pretty obscure. You might find clues in past journal entries.

  • asthma's
  • butt
  • conjugation
  • Dionysus
  • exortum
  • fuligin
  • gerbil (partial)
  • Heauimiere
  • intermammary
  • jarl
  • K-Mart
  • lifeline
  • meatloaf
  • Nabisco
  • ophthamology
  • Pedder
  • quislings
  • Reuben (partial)
  • Suvla
  • tingaling
  • uncontrolled
  • varlots
  • weary
  • xenon
  • yeti
  • zip!
Edit 2-5 22:40: fauxklore gave hints of arguable utility every day or two, so I'll follow suit. (Next hints will probably not be before the end of Shabbat.)
  • I spent a year or so going to hear the performer of one of these songs every week.
  • I spent about 15 years going to hear the performer of one of these songs every year.
  • I once got a private hammer-dulcimer lesson from the performer of one of these songs.
  • One of these performers stopped doing folk music to become a minister. (This one has been identified.)
  • One of these songs is from a show I will see this year in Pittsburgh. (This one has been mostly identified.)
  • One of these songs was on a tape given to me by Eric Bogle.
Added a bit later (sorry; left these off by accident):
  • One song title contains the name of a state.
  • Two song titles are names of specific people.
Edit 2-7 20:25: More hints -- these ones, I think, more informative. One per unsolved word (not counting partials), but not in order:
  • The American activist in this song should be known to most schoolkids north of the Mason-Dixon line.
  • The Australian photographer/conservationist in this song was unknown to me until I heard the song, but hearing the song made me want to know more.
  • This light-hearted folksong is from the Vietnam era.
  • This heavy-hearted war song is from Ireland.
  • This song contains the title of at least one Gene Wolfe novel.
  • This song is a send-up of a pretty dreadful (IMO) poem by Rose Hartwick Thorpe.
  • The author of this song has a filk "disease" named after him, and it would be either ironic or fitting if this one is not identified.
  • This song is about three vices, but not quite the usual three.
  • This song is not "Beware of the Sentient Chili" or "When Did We Have Sauerkraut?". (This one is likely to be hard.)
  • I considered using "Fifty-Nine Cents (for every man's dollar)" instead of this song.
  • Winter outings aren't always good ideas.
Please don't use Google to directly answer the challenge, but feel free to use it for fact-checks if you think it'll help.

lj bug

 
 
 
 
 
 
Lies, by Stan Rogers

Recorded on Northwest Passage and Home in Halifax

"So this is Beauty's finish! Like Rodin's 'Belle Heauimiere.'"

Interesting side note... The liner notes in HiH confirm your spelling, but the notes for NP spell it "Heaulmiere" with an "L". www.rodin-web.org also agrees with the "L" spelling.
And giddysinger jumps into the lead with 3 points. :-)

I noticed the spelling discrepancy too (via Google, not NP), but took it from the liner notes I have. I figured the author gets to be definitive for what he meant, but didn't realize he was himself inconsistent.



Edited at 2009-02-05 02:57 am (UTC)
(Deleted comment)
Yeti: nope.

Lies: correct, but giddysinger beat you by 9 minutes. If it had been closer to simultaneous I'd give you the points too.

K-Mart: ok, 4 points because I've never heard of that song. (I can see from another comment that I'm going to have trouble with that one...)
Grey Funnel Line, by Cyril Tawney

"Don't mind the rain or the rolling sea,
A weary night never worries me."

Many people have recorded this song, but my favorite is a version that is nothing like Cyril's version. Here's Tinsmith's take on the song:

http://giddysinger.vox.com/library/audio/6a00d09e68b891be2b011017a70a7d860e.html
Not the song I had in mind, so 4 points to you.
I'm sorry.

I am SO sorry.

I have to, and I really wish I didn't:

Baby Got Back, by Sir Mix-a-Lot.

Among many references to that word in the song:

"You can do side bends or sit-ups,
But please don't lose that butt"
Wow. I have heard of neither the song nor the performer.

I have you at 11 points now.
"From coast to coast we like to boast there's a K-Mart close at hand" From Myn ynd Wymyn (All vowels replaced by 'y's)
Who knew that K-Mart was so musically common? Never heard of that one, so 4 points for you.

Let us dance with Dionysus
And get drunk on wine and spices
The Christians call them "vices"
But they're good enough for me!
Ok, I should have predicted that. 1 point for the snippet and 1 point for it not being the song I had in mind.
(Deleted comment)
Yup! We digitized that Windbourne tape within the last few weeks. 2 points (snippet and source); do you know the name of the song?

Lyrics: "And it went Zip! when it moved, and Pop! When it stopped, and Whirr when it stood still"
Name of song: Marvelous little toy
Source: I think I first heard Pete Seeger sing it, although Peter Paul & Mary and probably others have done it too -- it's a folk/kid's song.
Correct. I'll give you the source point for PP&M. Author point (and that's the one I had in mind) is still available.
It's obviously Tom Lehrer's "The Elements"

"and argon, krypton, neon, radon, xenon, zinc and rhodium"

Actually, I'd have been struggling more, except Shmuel (who I ganked the game from in the first place) had used the same lyric
Drat, I should've gotten that one. :-)
"And how in that hell they called Suvla Bay / we were butchered like lambs to the slaughter"

Eric Bogle, "And the Band Played Waltzing Matilda"
Yup. 3 more points, for 6.
Lyrics: "..the world is in a crisis, he said listen Dionysis..."
TItle: Shaw
Source: Composer/Lyrics: Stephen Sondheim, from "the Frogs" (I'm most familiar with the '04 revival, but it existed in earlier versions back from his college days at Yale.)

Since Dionysis is a character in it, there are actually several songs with his name in it, but this is the one which came to mind.
Another source I haven't heard of! (I mean Sondhim, yes, but not this show.) 4 more points, for a total of 7.
"So pass the amphorae
and roll up the floor; I'll
be priestessin' for Dionysus."
--"The Goddess Done Left Me", Leigh Ann Hussey (the late motogrrl)
That's the one! 3 points.
"Exortum est orlis[sp?] porta
Clausa per transitor
Unde lux est orta
Salus invenitor
Gaudete,,,"

Gaudete, (Piae Cantiones, more or less, 1598), Steeleye Span.

AND!

"Exortum est in love and lys
Now Christ his grace he gan us gys
And with his body us bought to blys
Both alle and some!"

I have no idea who recorded it, but it's in Early English Carols by, uh, Stainer?
*smack* Should have remembered Gaudete. The latter is the one I had in mind. I have it on a CD called "An Early English Christmas". 7 points with one word!
Arg. I'm pretty sure I know the source of "uncontrolled", but I can't get more than 5 of the relevant words in consecutive order. I was always weak on that verse.
AHA!

"... Our results are up ten-fold
Even though our experiments get a little 'uncontrolled'!"

"We've Got an Animal Liberationist in Our Lab" by Heather Rose Jones


Edited at 2009-02-05 03:54 am (UTC)
Reuben, Reuben, I've been thinking
What a grand world this would be,
If the girls were all transported
Far beyond the Northern Sea...

(this is from memory, so I don't have good footnotes)
Ok, 1 point for the snippet and 1 for not being the one I had in mind. (Err, what is it?)