
- SONG THERE IS A CAT IN THE KETTLE AT THE PEKING MOON ARCHIVE
- SONG THERE IS A CAT IN THE KETTLE AT THE PEKING MOON FULL
If you go to which is for the Bob Rivers Show in Seattle.His version is the original artist who sang my song for the American Comedy Network.
SONG THERE IS A CAT IN THE KETTLE AT THE PEKING MOON FULL
Sing a Song of Sixpence Sing a song of sixpence, a pocket full of rye, Four-and-twenty blackbirds baked in a pie, When the pie was opened, the birds began to sing. Yes Foo Bar.Aaron Wilburn is the guy you hear singing most of the rip offs of my Lyrics. The song was originally written in the 1890s, and was used as a Presidential campaign theme in the 1920s. (Outside of this discussion, I couldn't find much to conclusively determine it either way, but if that's really you, I'll bet you know the story, and can help us help the 'net settle the history of this awesome parody once and for all!) What light can you shed on the story between you and Aaron Wilburn, who also sometimes gets credit for it? (Or was he also someone who performed it?) But while googling around to back it up, I also found this. They can feed you cat and youll never know. I'll buy that, and have modified my original post accordingly. Theres a cat in the kettle at the Peking Moon The place that I eat every day at noon.

SONG THERE IS A CAT IN THE KETTLE AT THE PEKING MOON ARCHIVE
I think the "DJ Jimmy Ray & Jay" song dates to the mid-90s, and the Mad Music Archive attributes it to Manic Larry Baker in the late 80s.) Google has many special features to help you find exactly what youre looking for. I concur with the guy who posted here about the difference between authoring and performing a song. Search the worlds information, including webpages, images, videos and more. (EDIT : Wikipedia page no longer refers to it. As with the erroneous attributions of Chapin's song to Stevens, this parody has been attributed incorrectly to "Weird Al" Yankovic - a source of irritation to Yankovic, who eschews the use of racist humor. 2.Īccording to Wikipedia, DJs Jimmy Ray & Jay of WGH-FM Eagle 97.3 (Norfolk, VA) wrote performed a parody of the song, entitled " Cat's in the Kettle" on their second release Ill-Eagles II: Living in the House of Hope, which plays with the stereotype that Chinese restaurants in America use cat meat to pad out their food. (Maybe the same songwriter, but recorded under a different name by a couple of US DJs?) under the name of the Ill-Eagles, it appears as Track 5 of their Solid Mold, Vol. I think the late Jim Taylor of Sydney claimed to have written it.Ĭlose.
