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Beans, Beans, The Musical Fruit" (alternately "Beans, Beans, good for your heart") is a playground saying and children's song about how beans cause flatulence (i.e. farting). [1] The basis of the song (and bean/fart humor in general) is the high amount of oligosaccharides present in beans.
Chocolatey [5] is a machine-level, command-line package manager and installer for software on Microsoft Windows. It uses the NuGet packaging infrastructure and Windows PowerShell to simplify the process of downloading and installing software. [6] The name is an extension on a pun of NuGet (from "nougat") "because everyone loves Chocolatey ...
The Jelly Beans: 9 7 - "All Grown Up" The Crystals 98 27 - Written by Jeff Barry, Ellie Greenwich, and Phil Spector "The Kind of Boy You Can't Forget" The Raindrops 95 - - "People Say" The Dixie Cups 12 7 - "Maybe I Know" Lesley Gore: 14 - 20 1972: The Seashells, #32 UK "Good Night Baby" The Butterflys: 51 - -
This confuses me - we always sang this as a song: Beans, beans, good for the heart The more you eat, the more you fart, The more you fart the better you feel, So eat baked beans for every meal. I am interested to know which came first - I would imagine that 'musical fruit' is a bowlderisation of 'good for the heart'.
Now 25, Beans (aka Steven Anthony Lawrence) is living life away from the Hollywood spotlight. He told HuffPost earlier this year that he has being doing some acting, lots of commercials, and ...
God's Favorite Band features 20 of Green Day's previous hits, as well as 2 new songs: a new version of the Revolution Radio (2016) track "Ordinary World", featuring country singer Miranda Lambert, and a previously unreleased song entitled "Back in the USA".
International Superhits! is the first greatest hits compilation by American rock band Green Day, released November 13, 2001, through Reprise Records.It collects all of the band's singles released between 1994 and 2000 as well as a rerecording of "Maria", a B-side from Waiting, and a previously unreleased track, "Poprocks & Coke".
For "Chocolate", Crossey revealed the band were "pretty unashamed" about wanting the song to become a commercial success. Following the initial ideation stage, the 1975 and Crossey recorded the song at Motor Museum studios in Liverpool. [3] Alongside "Robbers" and "Sex", the track was one of the first three written for The 1975. [9]