When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Fun Song Factory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fun_Song_Factory

    The series began as a series of direct-to-video features which were recorded in front of a live audience. The first Fun Song Factory was released on 1 December 1994, and released as part of a series of original straight-to-video content commissioned by Abbey Home Entertainment's Abbey Broadcast Communications subsidiary.

  3. Arnold Layne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arnold_Layne

    The song is about a man whose strange hobby is stealing women's lingerie from washing lines. [4] According to Roger Waters, "Arnold Layne" was actually based on a real person: "Both my mother and Syd's mother had students as lodgers because there was a girls' college up the road so there were constantly great lines of bras and knickers on our washing lines and 'Arnold' or whoever he was, had ...

  4. Candy and a Currant Bun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Candy_and_a_Currant_Bun

    The Mars Volta's cover of "Candy and a Currant Bun" was released in some U.S. indie stores as free 5" VinylDisc in 2008. It was given away with purchase of the album The Bedlam in Goliath. The VinylDisc was an experimental format that contained a digital side and a vinyl side, one side playing in a CD player, while the other side playing on a ...

  5. Currant bun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Currant_bun

    Neither should be confused with a spiced bun, nor with a similar cake called the tea cake. Nor should it be confused with the scone, a form of cake that is also likely to use currants but which is generally smaller, and which is usually eaten with butter or some butter substitute. Currant Bun is English rhyming slang for the tabloid newspaper ...

  6. List of playground songs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_playground_songs

    "One, Two, Three, Four, Five" "On Top of Old Smokey" "Fast Food Song" (a song using the names of several fast food franchises) "Popeye the Sailor Man" (theme song from the 20th-century cartoon series) "Ring Around the Rosie" "Row, Row, Row Your Boat" "Sea Lion Woman" "See Saw Margery Daw" "Singing To The Bus Driver" "Stella Ella Ola" "Ten Green ...

  7. Hot Cross Buns (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hot_Cross_Buns_(song)

    Hot Cross Buns was an English street cry, later perpetuated as a nursery rhyme and an aid in musical education. It refers to the spiced English confection known as a hot cross bun, which is associated with the end of Lent and is eaten on Good Friday in various countries. The song has the Roud Folk Song Index number of 13029.

  8. Children's music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Children's_music

    The use of children's music, to educate, as well as entertain, continued to grow, as evidenced in February 2009, when Bobby Susser's young children's series surpassed five million CD sales. [8] In September 2016, Smithsonian Folkways Recordings label acquired the Bobby Susser series, to further the exposure of children's music that teaches as ...

  9. Cumulative song - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cumulative_song

    Cumulative songs are popular for group singing, in part because they require relatively little memorization of lyrics, and because remembering the previous verse to concatenate it to form the current verse can become a kind of game.