Dickie Goodman Greatest Hits

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Total Tracks: 32   Total Length: 66:51

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Michael Azerrad

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eMusic editor-in-chief Michael Azerrad is the author of Come As You Are: The Story of Nirvana (Doubleday, 1993), which remains the definitive Nirvana biography,...more »

04.22.11
Plunderphonics — before there was such a thing.
2006 | Label: Goodman Brothers / IODA

Imagine a single that sampled U2, Jay-Z, Bruce Springsteen, Nirvana and a bunch of others — without permission — and then hit #3 on the Billboard charts, selling more than a million copies. That's right, you're imagining the mother of all lawsuits. You're also imagining something that pretty much already happened — in 1956.

That was when 21-year-old Dickie Goodman, along with partner Bill Buchanan, recorded "The Flying Saucer," parts 1 and 2, on a reel-to-reel tape recorder, parodying Orson Welles 'infamous War of the Worlds broadcast with a frenetic, freewheeling skit about an alien invasion, brazenly incorporating snippets of hits by Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry, Carl Perkins, Bill Haley and about two dozen other musical giants.

REPORTER: Pardon me, madam, would you tell us what would you do if the saucers were to land?

WOMAN ON STREET #1 (Little Richard from "Tutti Frutti"): Jump back in the alley!

REPORTER: Thank you and now this gentleman there…

MAN ON STREET #1 (Fats Domino from "Poor Me"): What I'm going to do/ Is hard to tell.

REPORTER: And the gentleman with the guitar, what would you do?

MAN ON THE STREET #2: (Elvis Presley from "Heartbreak… read more »

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A (thankfully) one of a kind artist

terminalny

These might be the corniest recordings, ever, probably enjoyed best by the type of people that thought of the skits on the Lawrence Welk show as hilariously accurate social commentary. Goodman's "masterpiece", "Mr. Jaws", mysteriously not included here, has stuck in my memory ever since I heard it in the 5th grade, which I suppose I'm mentioning as a sort of warning - but this stuff is fine as a goof (although 32 tracks is really, really pushing it) and you might enjoy it if you are under the influence of the type of thing that makes you forget your name or accidentally go home with transsexuals.

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???

Jukebox-Jimmy

Okay, this is a priceless collection....but where are "Mr. Jaws" and "The Flying Saucer"?

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So Scary I remember these

pastelpunk

I remember hearing these being played on AM radio when was I was a kid during the mid-70's; in fact, I think I bought the King Kong 45. Never thought I would find these again- glad I belong to eMusic.

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