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The following is a list of Muppet Mentions made in music and songs outside of the [[The Jim Henson Company|Henson]]/[[Sesame Workshop|Sesame]]/[[The Walt Disney Company#The Muppets Studio|Muppet]] worlds, none of which is significant enough to have its own page in the [[:Category:Music Mentions|Music Mentions category]]. |
The following is a list of Muppet Mentions made in music and songs outside of the [[The Jim Henson Company|Henson]]/[[Sesame Workshop|Sesame]]/[[The Walt Disney Company#The Muppets Studio|Muppet]] worlds, none of which is significant enough to have its own page in the [[:Category:Music Mentions|Music Mentions category]]. |
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+ | ==[[Avenue Q]]== |
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+ | *In this puppet-and-human Broadway musical, there is a song entitled "Mix Tape" where Princeton (originally played by [[John Tartaglia]]) gives Kate Monster (originally played by [[Stephanie D'Abruzzo]]) a mix tape, with one of the songs "[[Movin' Right Along]]." |
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==Beastie Boys== |
==Beastie Boys== |
Revision as of 23:27, 11 June 2010
The following is a list of Muppet Mentions made in music and songs outside of the Henson/Sesame/Muppet worlds, none of which is significant enough to have its own page in the Music Mentions category.
Avenue Q
- In this puppet-and-human Broadway musical, there is a song entitled "Mix Tape" where Princeton (originally played by John Tartaglia) gives Kate Monster (originally played by Stephanie D'Abruzzo) a mix tape, with one of the songs "Movin' Right Along."
Beastie Boys
- The Beastie Boys' 2004 song "Ch-Check it Out" contains the lyric "I bring the shit that’s beyond bizarre like Miss Piggy...Who moi?”.
- Also, in the video for "Right Right, Now Now", which takes place in Times Square, a picture of Kermit the Frog is seen in the background multiple times.
Rick Dees
- In the song, "We Are the Weird", which is a parody of the celebrity famine relief single "We Are the World", one of the celebrity impersonators sings in a Kermit-like voice, "We are the weird, but we're not stupid", and then says, "And we're laughing all the way to the bank! Yaaaaayyyyy!"
The Great Luke Ski
- The Great Luke Ski wrote a parody of "Who Let The Dogs Out?" by the Baha Men entitled "Who Let the Frog Out?" which is about Kermit the Frog and the Muppets.
- The Great Luke Ski
Green Day
- On the back cover of punk rock band Green Day's 1994 major label debut, Dookie, there is a picture of a crowd of kids, one of whom holds up a puppet of Ernie. The liner notes credit Ernie as being copyright Jim Henson Productions. Ernie was only on early prints of the CD, while airbrushed out on later pressings of the album, possibly to avoid legal action.
Billy Joel
- Sesame Street is referenced in the 1982 song "Pressure," which Joel wrote before appearing on the program in 1988. The subject of the song, a naïf who is having trouble handling pressure, is described as "All grown up and no place to go / Psych 1, Psych 2, What do you know? / All your life is Channel 13 / Sesame Street / What does it mean?"
- Note: Channel 13 is WNET, the PBS station in New York City.
The Oak Ridge Boys
- The Oak Ridge Boys filmed their music video for "Thank God For Kids" at Texas' Sesame Place. The song also contains the lyrics "We'd all live in a quiet house / Without Big Bird or a Mickey Mouse."
Derek Webb
- In his song "The Spirit Vs. the Kick Drum", Contemporary Christian artist Derek Webb samples Bert's dialogue of "A one, and-a two, and a chick-a-boom-a-chick!" and "Oh, groove with me, baby!" from "Bert's Drum Set".