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The budgerigar, or common parakeet (Melopsittacus undulatus), is a popular talking-bird species because of their potential for large vocabularies, ease of care and well-socialized demeanor. [27] Between 1954 and 1962, a budgerigar named Sparkie Williams held the record for having the largest vocabulary of a talking bird; at his death, he knew ...
[2] Carol Clerk of Melody Maker and Garry Bushell of Sounds noted that the music was hard to take seriously due to how over the top it was. [3] [4] Clerk found that "It's so far over the top it's in orbit, uttering the unutterable at every opportunity, yelling a defiant "eff off" at everybody and everything. It's so extreme, it's impossible to ...
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 4 February 2025. Small, long-tailed, seed-eating parakeet Budgerigar Temporal range: Pliocene–Holocene Pre๊ ๊ O S D C P T J K Pg N Blue cere indicates male Flaking brown cere indicates female in breeding condition Conservation status Least Concern (IUCN 3.1) Scientific classification Domain ...
The entire album Adaptation and Survival, on which this track is found, is composed entirely of manipulated insect sounds. Silverfish Thysanura: Sounds of System Breakdown [10] 2013 Electronic music: Instrumental Pediculosis (Mommy, I Have Lice) Phthiraptera: Fumigation: 2015 Metal The Dreaded Sea Lice Have Come Aboard Phthiraptera: Guttermouth ...
In this version, the soldier wears red, Kuala Lumpur is first disguised as Florida and then a koala, and the pygmy and budgie are sinister, blowing the soldier to pieces with rocket launchers on the second "I've seen things, I've seen them with my eyes; I've seen things, they're often in disguise", to which a box, marked "One Marching Soldier ...
The Last Stage is a compilation of unreleased Budgie tracks, mostly from the early-to-mid eighties. Many of these tracks were intended to be released on the follow-up to 1982's Deliver Us from Evil, an album that never saw the light of day. The track "Beautiful Lies" was supposedly meant to be included on the album but never made it.
Stevie pretends to be a budgerigar exploring the toys in its enclosure. Lauren acts as a budgie performing circus tricks on a silk trapeze. Fely sorts out her animal figurines according to their habitat; land, air and sea. Lauren goes fishing out on the water with her favourite fishing rod.
Power Supply showcases a more straight forward blues-influenced raw heavy metal sound that dispenses entirely with the experimental approach of the previous two albums, an approach that matched the zeitgeist of the time, reflecting the renewed and revitalised surge of interest in classic heavy metal brought about by the younger NWOBHM bands. [3]