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Barenaked for the Holidays is a holiday-themed studio album released by Canadian band Barenaked Ladies on October 5, 2004. The album includes Christmas and Hanukkah songs as well as "Auld Lang Syne", which is traditionally sung on New Year's Eve. There are also several songs that are simply about the winter season.
Page's father, Victor, was a drummer, [3] as is his brother, Matthew. As a child, Page would attempt to play songs on the piano, while his dad would keep the beat on the drums. [3] Page took ten years of piano lessons (though claimed he did not learn to play). [4] He also was a member of the Toronto Mendelssohn Youth Choir. [4]
"Brian Wilson" is a song by Canadian rock band Barenaked Ladies from their 1992 album Gordon. The song was written by Steven Page as a tribute to the Beach Boys' co-founder Brian Wilson. It was released as a single and peaked at number 18 on the Canadian Singles Chart. In 1998, the song peaked at number 68 on the US Billboard Hot 100.
The album, Ladies and Gentlemen: Barenaked Ladies and The Persuasions, consisted of new versions of existing Barenaked Ladies songs (along with one Kevin Hearn song and one Persuasions song). [66] It was released on 14 April 2017. [67] The band returned to the studio in the winter of 2017 to record their 12th studio album, Fake Nudes. [68]
Barelaked Nadies is the second DVD release from Canadian band Barenaked Ladies, though it is the first full-length release.It is a compilation of their music videos from 1991 to 2002, with one exclusion: the video for the Rock Spectacle version of "Brian Wilson" is missing, and the Gordon version is chronologically in its place.
The music video, directed by Phil Harder, is about the stresses of making a music video, in which the director forces them to record and re-record the video several times. At the end of the video, the director calls for a cut, and asks to record it again, prompting Page to scream. The screaming is not actually Steven's voice.
"Green Christmas" is a Christmas song by the Barenaked Ladies from the soundtrack for the 2000 film How The Grinch Stole Christmas!. [1] [2] It was later re-recorded as a studio acoustic version for the Christmas compilation Maybe This Christmas Too? in 2003, [3] and re-recorded again for the band's own holiday album, Barenaked for the Holidays, released in 2004. [4]
Despite the departure of Steven Page from Barenaked Ladies, Hearn has maintained a friendship with him. [ 9 ] His ongoing lawsuit against a Toronto art gallery, after learning that a Norval Morrisseau painting he had purchased was an apparent forgery , was profiled in Jamie Kastner 's 2019 documentary film There Are No Fakes . [ 10 ]