tru-LEE mad-LEE deep-LEE-DOO-oo ... the emphasis is all screwed up.
From what song?CTListener said:tru-LEE mad-LEE deep-LEE-DOO-oo ... the emphasis is all screwed up.
jfrancispastirchak said:From what song?CTListener said:tru-LEE mad-LEE deep-LEE-DOO-oo ... the emphasis is all screwed up.
Thanks. Should have flipped the page, I guess. My wife keeps a slice of 2 x 4 in the laundry room for slip ups like this one. She calls it her "Duh" stick. It works.CTListener said:"Truly, Madly, Deeply," the song referenced in the previous two posts. Sorry about not quoting, didn't think the reference would be lost on anyone.jfrancispastirchak said:From what song?CTListener said:tru-LEE mad-LEE deep-LEE-DOO-oo ... the emphasis is all screwed up.
And even then, I thought that he was saying "time in a winkling," or something like that. Made no sense at all.CTListener said:If you didn't know the title of the Barry Manilow hit was "Weekend in New England," you probably wouldn't have guessed New England was in the title at all. He only sings it once, in the line that begins "Time in New England..." I bet a lot of people figured it was called "When Will I Hold You Again" or "When Will Our Eyes Meet."
Seems like there was a thread about this, too. Unintelligible lyrics similar to this one (although not necessarily this particular example) came up in that thread.CTListener said:tru-LEE mad-LEE deep-LEE-DOO-oo ... the emphasis is all screwed up.
rnigma said:"Annie's Song" John Denver: "You Fill Up My Senses"
cd637299 said:rnigma said:"Annie's Song" John Denver: "You Fill Up My Senses"
True, but it's better than hearing the misheard lyric, "You Filled Out My Census"Ah but that is for the other thread.
cd
jfrancispastirchak said:cd637299 said:rnigma said:"Annie's Song" John Denver: "You Fill Up My Senses"
True, but it's better than hearing the misheard lyric, "You Filled Out My Census"Ah but that is for the other thread.
cd
Tell me you're kidding...
Just read your link. Now I can truly say I've seen it all. Now I can die.cd637299 said:I must have read that somewhere.....that's too good/ludicrous for me to pick out of thin air.jfrancispastirchak said:Tell me you're kidding...cd637299 said:True, but it's better than hearing the misheard lyric, "You Filled Out My Census"rnigma said:"Annie's Song" John Denver: "You Fill Up My Senses"Ah but that is for the other thread.
cd
EDIT: Must have been here---
http://www.kissthisguy.com/2657misheard.htm
cd
jfrancispastirchak said:It's In His Kiss (Betty Everett, and later, Cher)
Interestingly, the music trade gladly embraces the fractured perception of Cher's copy, "The Shoop-Shoop Song" as sort of an alternate working title. I can't personally recall any such response to Everett's orgional version, released in the early '60s.
cd637299 said:jfrancispastirchak said:It's In His Kiss (Betty Everett, and later, Cher)
Interestingly, the music trade gladly embraces the fractured perception of Cher's copy, "The Shoop-Shoop Song" as sort of an alternate working title. I can't personally recall any such response to Everett's orgional version, released in the early '60s.
Late to the party on this one, but---
Kate Taylor, James' sister, did a remake of the Betty E. tune in 1977, and indeed the title, per Billboard, was "It's in His Kiss." It was a minor MOR hit and made #49 on the Hot 100, and there was no shoop-shoop in it.
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radioman148 said:cd637299 said:jfrancispastirchak said:It's In His Kiss (Betty Everett, and later, Cher)
Interestingly, the music trade gladly embraces the fractured perception of Cher's copy, "The Shoop-Shoop Song" as sort of an alternate working title. I can't personally recall any such response to Everett's orgional version, released in the early '60s.
Late to the party on this one, but---
Kate Taylor, James' sister, did a remake of the Betty E. tune in 1977, and indeed the title, per Billboard, was "It's in His Kiss." It was a minor MOR hit and made #49 on the Hot 100, and there was no shoop-shoop in it.
cd
I remember it being called "The Shoop Shoop Song" in 1964 when Betty Everett had the hit. In fact, my 45 had that name on the record with "It's In His Kiss" in parenthesis. Even the WLS & WABC surveys had it listed as "The Shoop Shoop Song".
CTListener said:Smokey Robinson & the Miracles and Johnny Rivers recorded "The Tracks of My Tears," but when Linda Ronstadt got hold of it, it became "Tracks of My Tears." I first became aware of this when there was a long separation between the first two recordings and Ronstadt's on the local FM's A to Z special a few years ago.