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Sun 3 Oct, 2004 09:34 pm
da da dadada da-da-da-da-da-da da da da rrrrr we da da da...nanananana na na na
I think it's by black sabath...lol Thats how it sounds to me...don't know the words...lol
I think it's "Tell Her Goodbye" by Steampacket
Hehe..that's interesting, I couldn't find anything of the sort!
All that comes to mind for me is the Sesame Street theme song.
But that's always on my mind.
Na Na Hey Hey (Kiss Him Goodbye)
By: Steam
(Gary DeCarlo, Dale Frashuer and Paul Leka)
1969
Na na na na, na na na na, hey hey hey, goodbye
He'll never love you, the way that I love you
'Cause if he did, no no, he wouldn't make you cry
He might be thrillin' baby but a-my love (my love, my love)
So dog-gone willin'
So kiss him (I wanna see you kiss him, wanna see you kiss him)
Go on and kiss him goodbye
Na na na na, hey hey-hey, goodbye
Na na na na, na na na na, hey hey hey, goodbye
Listen to me now
He's never near you to comfort and cheer you
When all those sad tears are fallin' baby from your eyes
He might be thrillin' baby but a-my love (my love, my love)
So dog-gone willin'
So kiss him (I wanna see you kiss him. I wanna see you kiss him)
Go on and kiss him goodbye
Na-na na-na-na na na na na na na, hey hey hey, goodbye
Hey hey-hey, goodbye
Na na na na, na na na na, hey hey hey, goodbye
Na na na na, na na na na, hey hey hey, goodbye
Na na na na, na na na na, hey hey hey, goodbye [repeat many times and fade out]
If you haven't heard Pessy, Slappy is terrorizing Canadian chicks this week.
panzade wrote:If you haven't heard Pessy, Slappy is terrorizing Canadian chicks this week.
Ohh really...lol....guide me to that thread!!
I found it...hehe....it wasn't sabbath, or steam, it was......ozzy....iron man!!
Shoot! Of course! I should have recognized it.
Possible Predecessor...
I ran into a song a few days ago that might actually be the predecessor to the "Nah Nah Nah" song. It actually turned up in a mis-named file off Kazaa. At first I thought it was a cheap rip-off due to it's low-fi and crude lyrics, but I did some research and found out that it was written by guy named "David Peel". This guy was a menace in a lot of people's book because of his pro-marijuana message, but his music went on to inspire the Beetles and apparently he was pretty big in Europe. I haven't been able to find the name of the song, since it was mislabeled. I have very little to work with other than the lyrics, so I was hoping someone here might have some insight. If this song was on his first album (David Peel - Have a Marijuana © 1968) it would have predated the earliest I can find "Nah Nah Nah" by a year. That's pretty close, but it would be natural that one would come right after the other. The question is which one came first. So if anyone feels like digging through some dark history of music, or experienced it first hand, please let me know what you find! Here is the Chorus:
"Marijuana, Marijuana, hey hey hey, get high"
I have the full lyrics if someone wants it, but it's a little crude (as you can imagine).
Have a Marijuana
Availability: Limited availability
Price: £13.99 | Buy now from Amazon.co.uk | Add to cart
Information
Release Date: 06 September, 1994
Sales Rank:
Customer Review: out of 5, based on reviews
Artist(s)
David Peel With Lower East Side Atomic Rock
Track listing
Mother Where Is My Father?
I Like Marijuana
Here Comes a Cop
I've Got Some Grass
Happy Mother's Day
Up Against the Wall
I Do My Bawling in the Bathroom
Alphabet Song
Show Me the Way to Get Stoned
We Love You
David Peel was one of the most militant and underground folk-singers in the age of the student riots. He was a modern minstrel of the white lumperproletariat, who terrorized the Lower East Side with live performances at street corners, accompanied by random street musicians. This political bum was obviously mimicking street preachers, except that his religion was the marijuana, his Bible was rock'n'roll, and his mission was to expose the hipochrisy of the bourgeoise. His semi-improvised albums (or, better, public "happenings") followed in the footsteps of the Fugs' grotesque agit-prop cabaret and of Frank Zappa's satirical operettas. Peel's hysterical, sarcastic and insolent tone, and his spartan/spastic combo of guitar, harmonica and tambourine (which mainly contributed rhythm), and the naive enthusiasm of everybody involved (responsible for some of the most hair-rising backing vocals in the history of music), created a new kind of folk music. His masterpiece, Have A Marijuana (1969), a demented sabotage of protest songs, hillbilly, blues and square dances, was an epic insult to common-sense.
He played folk music with the emphasis of punk-rock and the arrangements of "lo-fi" pop. And he played it with divine recklessness.
No major encyclopedia or history of rock music mentions him.