Subject: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: dick greenhaus Date: 05 Oct 97 - 08:42 PM We used to declaim: A noble fish, the bassTake it, y'all Click for previous thread |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: JMike Date: 06 Oct 97 - 09:46 AM We also had: Spider, spider on the wall, Ain't you got no brains at all? Get off the wall, it's just been plastered- Off the wall you silly spider. For some reason it stuck in my mind to the point where I would always chuckle when (years later) I heard "off the wall" in any other context. (Much to the chagrin of my politically active - and rather humorless about it - acquaintances.) |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Bert Date: 06 Oct 97 - 11:14 AM Which reminds me.... Little fly upon the wall Ain't you got no clothes at all? Blimey! Ain't it cold? |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Jerry Friedman Date: 06 Oct 97 - 09:33 PM Thanks for the words to the "mosquito" song, Rechal! Bert, I looked up "Yaw, Yaw, Yaw", and saw the steeple and the people, and... How shall I put this? I'd thought "Barnacle Bill" was about as low as you could go (except for the people who recite versions of dirty limericks that don't scan), but "Yaw, Yaw, Yaw" may be a new nadir of quality. |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Bert Date: 07 Oct 97 - 08:50 AM Jerry, That's FOLK music for you. |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Joe Offer Date: 19 Feb 99 - 05:09 PM This thread is a continuation of a real classic, Naughty kids'greatest hits. That thread got to 114 messages, big enough to crash the computers of some poor Mudcatteers. Please post new messages here. -Joe Offer- |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Bert Date: 19 Feb 99 - 05:41 PM My Dad used to sing this when he was a kid. This is all that has survived. Tune: Men of Harlech I'm the man who comes from Scotland Shootin peas up a nanny goat's bottom. I'm the man who comes from Norway Shooting peas up a nanny goat's doorway. Bert. |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Lonesome EJ Date: 19 Feb 99 - 05:57 PM How about"Whistle while you work/Hitler is a jerk/Mussolini bit his weenie now it doesn'T work" or(to the tune of Smoke Gets in your Eyes)"they asked me how I knew/rabbit shit was blue/everybody said/you're out of your head/rabbit shit is red" or even(tune of Whoopie-tie-yi-yippie-yippie-yee) "Last time I seen her/She was sittin in the grass/Countin the freckles on a cowboys a$$/Gonna tie my p*ck*r to a tree,to a tree/gonna tie my p*ck*r to a tree" then there was(tune of If You're Happy and You Know it) "There's a skeeter on my p*t*r, knock it off/There's a skeeter on my p*t*r ,knock it off/There's a dozen on my cousin,I can hear them bastards buzzin/There's a skeeter on my p*t*r knock it off"..ok,so I hung with a bad crowd! |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: katlaughing Date: 19 Feb 99 - 06:30 PM Don't think this was ever in song version, but did anyone ever hear what we thought was a joke, in 4/5th grade, about Roy Rogers and Dale Evans?
They get naked. Looking at his chest, she says, "Roy, what nice "grass" you have!" We thought we were so naughty! kat
|
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Susan of DT Date: 19 Feb 99 - 08:03 PM Gee Kat, we said that about Tarzan and Marilyn Monroe... |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: northfolk/al cholger Date: 19 Feb 99 - 10:16 PM An infamous school teacher from northern michigan was known to regale the late night barroom crowds with a parody of Colonel Bogies March: Hitler, he only had one ball, Hitler.... |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: bassen Date: 20 Feb 99 - 04:47 PM Being the man from Norway I guess I'm obliged to contribute to this thread... As no one has contributed the version I remember, I give you the following in the interests of the record being absolutely complete:
Hitler had only one left ball We also sang:
Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the lord But the earliest naughty song I can remember was a ditty that we recited as we pointed to appropriate body parts "milk, milk, lemonade, 'round the corner fudge is made". It was 1954, I was five and I thought God would strike me dead... bassen |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Philippa Date: 20 Feb 99 - 06:04 PM There's a few songs of comparable nature at the dark Irish kid songs thread |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: catspaw49 Date: 20 Feb 99 - 06:07 PM I probably should have read Part One of this thread, but one of the best collections of these children's parody songs, albeit "clean," is from "Prairie Home Companion" and Garrison Keilor. Very cute and many were done on the show...another great way of flooding the old memory vaults. One song parody not included was a beautiful take-off on the old gospel/bluegrass piece called "The Sweetest Gift." Does anyone happen to remember that one? I remember the last lines of the chorus as,
She brought a sandwich I think the book is still available, though I haven't checked. catspaw |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Teresa Date: 21 Feb 99 - 02:46 AM Here's one I heard Robin Williamson sing. I'm sure I would have picked it up as a kid if I'd heard it then, because it sounded so jaunty and innocent.: Me wife's got a furry thing, Teresa |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Teresa Date: 21 Feb 99 - 02:52 AM Aha, after looking at my first post of lyrics, the formatting problems become evident. Oh, well; it seems readable anyway. Sorry, folks. Teresa |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: SteveF (inactive) Date: 26 Feb 99 - 01:23 PM A nifty song you could actually perform in public for a young audience (and their parents!) goes to the tune of Pack Up All My Cares and Woes: I have lost my underwear I don't care I'll go bare Bye, bye, longjohns
They were very close to me
If you find them you'll know where to find me
I have lost my underwear |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Metchosin Date: 07 Apr 00 - 04:00 AM To the tune of "Viva La Companie"
Archibald jumped up and down on the porch
Further to a previous post
Hasten Jason
Bert, you wanted naughty kid's songs, I learned this in Grade 1, almost 50 years ago and have, unfortunately, never forgotten it, so I guess I must have been a naughty kid. The following is to a common tune, but I can't remember the original title
Two farmers, two farmers Considering I read this whole thread, I probably still am, a naughty kid. |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Lady McMoo Date: 07 Apr 00 - 04:36 AM I remember:
Mary had a little lamb
Willy was a watchdog
Ask no questions
Flies are a nuisance mcmoo |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Lady McMoo Date: 07 Apr 00 - 04:39 AM Also:
Willy had a willy
mcmoo |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: GUEST,Neil Lowe Date: 07 Apr 00 - 08:11 AM Seems like the following was the chanted finale (or was coupled) to another ditty:
Three, six, nine,
The line broke, Maybe this was one of those jump rope rhymes. To quote dick greenhaus in Part I of this thread: if this chant qualifies as an example of "the purest form of folk," then this contribution should put to bed the controversy over whether rap is folk. Not to rouse any sleeping dogs or anything. Neil |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: SDShad Date: 07 Apr 00 - 09:38 AM To the obvious tune:
I'm looking over my dead dog Rover
No use explaining the one remaining |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Jeri Date: 07 Apr 00 - 10:02 AM LEJ, the first I heard the "tie my p*ck*r to a tree" song was in an early HBO comedy showcase thing by ...er, I hate when this happens...was it Tom Thomerson? Tim Timerson? Tim Thomerson? (Some guy who sort of has his first name in his last name and has acted in numerous films since then.)
'Course everyone knows: |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Jeri Date: 07 Apr 00 - 10:04 AM Now that I think of it, I think we actually sang about "tits," not balls. |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Midchuck Date: 07 Apr 00 - 10:15 AM (To the tune of "Red River Valley - slowly, in multipart harmony)
You can hold it in your hand, Mrs. Murphy, Peter. |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Amos Date: 07 Apr 00 - 11:44 AM Oh, the moon shown bright on a summer's night And it shown right through her nightie And what I saw as against the law By Jesus Christ Almighty She jumped in bed and covered up her head And said Ic ouldn't find her But I knew darn well she was lying like hell So I jumped in bed behind her Oh, I shoved ol' Pete right through the sheet And into the organ grinder And ... .... dang, forgot the last lines! We also sang a dirty dity about finding a whore on Canal Strett, which y'all would find boring, to be sure.. This all dates to 1958 or so. A |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: GUEST,Mrrzy-at-work Date: 07 Apr 00 - 12:08 PM My dad used to tell a story of the only time he was ever struck by his mom was for singing There's a german in the grass / With a bullet up his ass / Pull it out, pull it out / Boy scout! Never heard anyone else knew this one. It would have happened in the late 20s or early 30's. As a child I used to sing something that went Underwear, Underwear! How I itch in my new Underwear! My older sisters taught me that one in the early 60's. Could date from the late 50's. |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: catspaw49 Date: 07 Apr 00 - 12:17 PM Having just read this thread again, my above post from over a year ago is still true....its a really great book! And does anybody know the parody version of "Sweetest Gift" that I mentioned above....I'm still lookin'!! Spaw |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: GUEST,Mrrzy-at-work Date: 07 Apr 00 - 12:20 PM I saw on the older thread something about the alligator purse. We used to sing that one: Miss Lucy had a baby, she named him Tiny Tim, she put him in the bathtub to see if he could swim He ate up all the water, he drank up all the soap, he tried to eat the bathtub but it wouldn't go down his throat Miss Lucy called the doctor, miss Lucy called the nurse, miss Lucy called the lady with the alligator purse (now start singing faster and faster) In walked the doctor, in walked the nurse, in walked the lady with the alligator purse Measles said the doctor, mumps said the nurse, chickenpox said the lady with the alligator purse Out walked the doctor, out walked the nurse, out walked the lady with the alligator purse! This was done by 2 people who did a fancy hand-clapping thing along with it. |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: GUEST,Mrrzy-at-work Date: 07 Apr 00 - 12:22 PM Speaking of hand-clapping thingies, does anyone know Amalama koomalama koomalama vista? Or should this be another thread seeking hand-clapping 2-person songs? |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Bert Date: 07 Apr 00 - 12:30 PM In 1944 the soldiers went to war They used their bums instead of guns in 1944. |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: GUEST,Estela Date: 07 Jun 00 - 04:46 PM I have some alternate versions of a few songs, and even a few not mentioned: One is the Miss Lucy Had a Steamboat song; This is the longest version I know of, and I haven't seen it posted yet, and yes, we sang it with the emphasis as marked. Miss Lucy had a steamboat. The steamboat had a bell. Miss Lucy went to heaven and the steamboat went to-- Hello, operator. Please give me number nine, And if you disconnect me, I will chop off your-- Behind the 'fridgerator, there was a piece of glass. Miss Lucy sat upon it and it broke (sic) her little-- Ask me no more questions; I'll tell you no more lies. The boys are in the bathroom pulling up their-- Flies are in the meadow. The bees are in the park. Miss Lucy and her boyfriend are kissing in the-- D-a-r-k. D-a-r-k. D-a-r-k dark, dark, dark! Dark is like a movie. a movie's like a show. A show is on a TV set and that is all-- I know I know my mother. I know I know my pa. I know I know my sister who is pulling up her bra! There was also some version that had the order somehow altered so that the movies were connected to movie theater was connected to kissing in the dark. But this was the one we usually sang. Also a version of the song listed as "Sweet Violets". I learned this one at camp, and ours was actually part of the "Shaving Cream" group. What I remember went like this. There were at least 5 verses. A baby fell out of a window (a window) You'd think that it's head would have split (have split) But good luck was with him that morning (that morning) He fell in a pile of.... Chorus: Shhhhhhhhaving cream! Be nice and clean! Shave every day and you'll always look clean, Bop bop, mm bop bop, mm bop bop, mm bop. [As I recall, the mm bop bop part had a sort of dance with it: you would alternate ducking down and sitting standing up real straight. Sometimes alternate people would do it on opposite words.] I don't recall more of our verses, at least not in full, but there was definitely one about a soldier whose kit was full of...you guessed it. And someone being full of...right. None of them are the ones listed under "Sweet Violets." And I've got a variant of the "I'm a nut" song. Our chorus was the same, with claps instead of snaps, but our verses went: I'm a little acorn round Lying on the cold, cold ground. Everybody steps on me. That is why I'm cracked, you see. CHO. Called myself up on the phone Just to see if I was home. Asked myself out on a date. Said to be ready by half past eight. CHO. Took myself to the picture show. Sat myself in the very first [or front] row. Put my arm around my waist. Got so fresh I slapped my face! CHO. Let's see. I don't think I've heard "Jaws" mentioned. It went "Baby jaws, jaws jaws, jaws, jaws, baby jaws, jaws, jaws, jaws, jaws" and then you'd substitute things like "momma jaws", "grandpa jaws", etc. Each one had a hand symbol. Baby jaws was hands together at the wrist, small motions, and it went up through one linked at the elbows, to one with your whole arms for the biggest jaws. The idea was that that you'd close the jaws on every word "jaws." I think there may also have been one like this that went "Aaaaaaaaalllllllligator...aaaaalllllllligator" where alligators ate either people or each other, but the aaaaaaaallllligator was the chorus. Then there was a song about Mrs. O'Leary [Cow Kicked the Bucket] I don't remember much but the end of either each verse or the whole song had several shouted directions, at least some with motions. One about "Burn [Something] Burn". The last three were "jump, lady, jump!" [Waving like you were holding airplane cones] "errrrrrrrrrsmash!" [It was kind of a sound effect. Hand motion was a big swoop from high to low, that crashed into the other hand.] And then the last was "get the shovel!" We also sang the "Comet, it makes your mouth turn green" parody (or just whistled the melody) and "Greasy Grimy Gopher Guts" (our bird line was "little baby birdies' feet"). There were plenty more, but those were the most gruesome, and so most memorable. Oh yeah! And "Tiptoe through the Goose Doo" which was probably an original parody. The grass near the lake at the camp had a lot of "goose doo." On long bus trips, we used to sing dirty versions of "The Ants Go Marching." I don't think they were ever standardized, you'd sort of make up the rhymes as you went along. I know of a few clapping songs. Miss Mary Mack (If anyone wants the full words I can probably manage them), and "The Band-Aid Song." The "clapping" for the band aid song was quite complicated. There was less clapping than swishy motions and intricate grabs of the hands and wrists from above and below and things like that. The song went "I am stuck on Band-Aid brand cause the Band-Aid's stuck on me!" And there was a part about it not coming off in the bathtub, followed by the "I am stuck..." piece again. I'm not sure, but I think we at least tried to do The Band-Aid Song with three or four people, and there was another clapping song which I can't remember at all (it may even have been Miss Lucy) that was done in a circle of five or six people.... or that might have applied to any song that had the simple clap, clap left hands with your partner, clap, clap right hands with your partner pattern. Band-Aid was too complicated for more than four people to even attempt, since it had to be done in the middle. I wish I could remember them better, especially given it's been less than a decade for a lot of these. Oh well. Sorry for the longwinded posting, I just knew a lot of these songs at one point. |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: kendall Date: 07 Jun 00 - 10:54 PM The first song I ever learned.
There once was a farmer who lived by a crick |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Metchosin Date: 08 Jun 00 - 12:01 AM To the tune of Humoresque:
Ever since I met your daughter That's all I can remember, anyone know if there are more verses? |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Annabelle Date: 08 Jun 00 - 01:38 AM IN days of old when knights were bold and toilets weren't invented they lay their load by the side of the road And went along contented -a favorite of my late, great grandpa |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: GUEST,Roger the skiffler Date: 08 Jun 00 - 06:34 AM Metch, ther was some discussion last year & it's in the DT use "dashboard" as the search term in the box. RtS |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Snuffy Date: 08 Jun 00 - 09:26 AM IN days of old when knights were bold And women weren't invented They used a hole in a telegraph pole And went away contented Wassail! V |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Irish sergeant Date: 08 Jun 00 - 07:56 PM A few quick comments. I learned Canal Street in Chicago. I was 12 and thought i was terribly wicked. this was 1967. Humoresque has a few other verses starting off with:
Passengers will please refrain From my friend Pete Box formerly of Her Majesty's Ship Ark Royal, Never let your bollocks dangle in the dust. And last but not least one I found in,of all places, the novel Battle Cry by Leon Uris;
Get out your Old grey bustle, Another form of folk music using a very broad brush are marching cadences. I know several disgusting ones. Hey, the Navy promised they would teach me a trade! Neil |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Marion Date: 08 Jun 00 - 11:48 PM Did anyone else sing my childhood favourite:
Everybody's doing it (The last two words should be slurred: it'ssssnot) Marion |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: kendall Date: 09 Jun 00 - 07:52 AM Put on your old blue panties That used to be your Anties That were found laying out in the hay With a hole in the middle that your uncle used to diddle In that good old fashioned way. |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Patrish(inactive) Date: 09 Jun 00 - 10:54 AM Oh the cow kicked Nellie in the Bellie in the barn Oh the cow kicked Nellie in the Bellie in the barn Oh the cow kicked Nellie in the Bellie in the barn And the farmer said it'll do her no harm
we used to sing this over and over again.
Me aunty Mary had a canary up her knicker leg Patrish |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Dharmabum Date: 09 Jun 00 - 02:13 PM Gross out songs were always our favorites. SCABS SANDWICHES Scabs sandwiches with puss on top, Monkey vomit and elephant snot. Doggy dandruf and cat poo poo. Scabs sandwiches are good for you. OR I'm Popeye the sailor man, I live in a garbage can, I eat all the worms and spit out the germs, I'm Popeye the sailor man. OR I'm Popeye the sailor man, I live in a frying pan, I turned on the gas and burned off my ass, I'm Popeye the sailor man. Believe me,at ten years old this stuff was hillarious! Ron. |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: GUEST Date: 26 Jun 00 - 05:51 PM When I was growing up in North Bay in Canada, I heard this song, sung to the tune of "Whistle while you Work" from Snow White Oh, Whistle while you work For Hitler is a jerk Mussolini bit his weinie Now it doesn't work! (We were pretty rude kids) |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: GUEST,Karolina, Poland Date: 27 Jun 00 - 05:53 PM Gee, what a grand thread! I'm so sorry I can't add anything as I'm from a non-English speaking country... I enjoyed reading it SO MUCH!!! |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Pixie Date: 27 Jun 00 - 07:53 PM We recited (for my mother)although it was advice for boys: "No matter how much you wiggle and dance The last three drops always go down your pants". Also:(without revealing a mis-spent youth?) "C'mon baby, take a chance I left my safe in my other pants" (I read it on a bathroom wall - honest!) I don't know if anyone else knows this version of "Old King Cole" taught to me by my best friend's mother: "Old King Cole was a merry old soul with two brass balls and an electric c*ck He gave those girls one hell of a shock" She also taught us "Good Morning Mrs. Murphy", but I only recite that to mixed company. The "Bean Poem" lasted for years..... |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Liz the Squeak Date: 28 Jun 00 - 06:50 PM Mary had a bicycle, the spokes were made of brass, and every time she turned the wheel, the spokes went up her skirt. Ah, the innocence of youth!!
How many times, have you had it off with an English Country gardener? LTS |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: Bert Date: 29 Jun 00 - 04:50 PM Pixie,
|
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: rabbitrunning Date: 05 Sep 00 - 12:45 AM When I was a kid we sang: How dry I am, How wet I'll be If I don't find The Bathroom key Now here's the key But where's the door? Aw, oops, too late It's on the floor It was even more fun as a chorus. The other "potty" song was to the tune of the theme song of an old western called "Branded" and went thusly: Stranded, stuck on the toilet bowl What can you do when you're stranded And you can't find the roll. To prove you're a man you have got to use your hand when you're stranded, and you can't find the roll! fake trumpet noises optional... CD |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: GUEST,John Bauman Date: 05 Sep 00 - 08:59 AM My mother taught me these and I've never heard them anywhere since--and she had a bunch of these; A petunia's a flower, like a begonia, A begonia's a meat, like a sausage, A sausage and battery's a crime, Monkeys crime trees' Trees a crowd, The rooster crowed in the morning and made a loud noise, The noise is on the face, like the eyes, Eyes are opposite Nays' The horse nays, has a colt, And wakes up in the morning with double petunia. 30 days hath Septober, April, June, and no wonder. All the rest have peanut butter, except Pasadena which hosts the Rose Bowl. Him have gone. Him have went. Him have left I all alone. Will him never come to I? Must me ALWAYS go to He? It can never was! Damn, Don't it awful?! Cheautiful burch ain't it? Some thinkle peep so. Mardon me padam, this pie is occupewed, May I sow you to another sheet? I'm not as think as you drunk I am but I fool so feelish. I've had tee many martoonies. (The very last line is the only one I've ever heard elsewhere.) John |
Subject: RE: Naughty kids' greatest hits II From: rabbitrunning Date: 05 Sep 00 - 12:00 PM I learned that last line as part of this:
I come before you to stand behind you Not sung, but said in a loud declaiming voice. |
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