A charming little ditty by dapper musician Thomas Benjamin Wild Esq, performed last November at Boyds of Bedford.
All together now…
A charming little ditty by dapper musician Thomas Benjamin Wild Esq, performed last November at Boyds of Bedford.
All together now…
‘Yuve Yuve Yu’ – The Hu
Give it a minute to get going.
The tradcore stylings of Mongolian metallers The Hu Band, who combine Western rock played on traditional instruments like the horsehead fiddle [morin khuur], Jew’s Harp [tumin khuur] and Mongolian guitar [tovshuur]) with Tuvan throat singing.
Mmm. Pitchy.
a smooth jazz cover of the Rick And Morty theme by Scott Bradlee of Postmodern Jukebox.
Schwifty.
Previously: 1920s Gangsta’s Paradise
Performers Daniel Gourski and Jonas Appel sample the sounds of an abandoned industrial dock to create every sound you hear.
A rather pleasing cover of Pink Floyd’s ‘Comfortably Numb’ (1979) by Australian pianist Josh Cohen.
If you like this, you may also care for his nimble-fingered versions of Radiohead’s ‘Daydreaming’ and David Bowie’s ‘Life On Mars‘.
1970s Saturday morning superhero show Super Friends deftly redubbed with the lyrical stylings of ODB, Method Man, Inspectah Deck, Capadonna, U-God, The RZA, The GZA, Masta Killa, Ghostface Killah, and Raekwon.
By Mylo The Cat.
Übermixer DJ Earworm’s seamless annual mashup of the year’s biggest US pop tunes.
Previously: United States Of Pop 2017
A cover of Pink Floyd’s ‘Wish You Were Here’ (1975) (with the last verse of ‘Time’ tacked on the end, performed by the talented Six String Soldiers of the US Army Field Band.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FHZAaMyqzbU
“Safety Talk” – Given Radebe.
The winner of a recent safety song competition by SNC Lavelin to promote safety in the workplace.
(Thanks Anonymous Safety Advocate)
Eddy Chen – one half of Australian duo Two Set Violin – performs Pachelbel’s ‘Canon’ on a brace of Yellow Screaming Rubber Chicken Kids Baby Toy Squeak Squeaker Chew Gifts.
Naturally, you enjoyed that.
Now let’s join Eddy as he accompanies his colleague Brett Yang on piano for a rendition of Beethoven’s ‘Für Elise’.
And now, Erik Satie’s Gymnopédie No.1.