Sesame street songs sing


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"Sing" is a Sesame Street song first performed in Season 2 with English and Spanish lyrics as "Sing"/"Canta."

It has since been sung a number of times on the show, with many different singers, sometimes with just the English lyrics, and (on a couple occasions) in English and American Sign Language.

Like "Bein' Green," it too has become an American standard, having been performed by a number of pop artists (sometimes credited as "Sing a Song"). Of particular note, the Carpenters' recording adds a new second verse that has occasionally been used in Sesame Street and Muppet performances.

Contents

  • 1 Sesame Street
    • 1.1 Specials and appearances
    • 1.2 International
  • 2 The Muppets
  • 3 Non-Muppet performances
  • 4 Videos
  • 5 Releases
  • 6 Sources

Sesame Street

Image Description
Bob and Miguel meet on the street and both mention that they were going to sing a song. Miguel explains that the Spanish word for sing is canta. Bob proposes that they sing the same song in English and Spanish. Together, they sing "Sing"/"Canta." (First: Episode 0218)
Susan greets Miguel in the arbor and asks about that song she heard him and Bob sing together a couple of weeks ago. She says that Bob taught her the English part and she'd love to learn the Spanish part. Together, they sing "Sing"/"Canta." (First: Episode 0273)
Bob and Rafael in English and Spanish. (First: Episode 0386)
David and Luis in English and Spanish. (First: Episode 0425)
Bob and Luis sit with the kids in the arbor for a night time rendition of "Sing/Canta" for vocals and guitar. (First: Episode 0493)
Bob and Luis on the stoop with the kids, with Oscar the Grouch inserting "blah-blah" instead of "la-la. " (First: Episode 0543)
Bob and Luis (on guitar) in English and Spanish with Susan and the kids as backup. (First: Episode 0655)
Bert leads the cast in a rendition of "Sing" from his bathtub. (First: Episode 0900)
Lily Tomlin in English and American Sign Language with two children on the steps of 123 Sesame Street. (First: Episode 0901)
Olivia and Linda in English and American Sign Language. (First: Episode 1330)
In his room, Bob gives the Two-Headed Monster a singing lesson: singing "Sing." (First: Episode 1736)
Telly Monster and Mr. Ortiz (First: Episode 1783)
Elmo, Bob, and the kids to Wanda Cousteau. (First: Episode 3128)
Luis and Rosita (First: Episode 3794)
Suzie Kabloozie (First: Episode 3794)
Big Bird, Gordon, Gabi, her friends, Alan, Gina, and Zoe. (First: Episode 3802)
The Dingers held a ding-a-long, and led the cast into singing a variation, "Ding a Song." (First: Episode 3824)
Nathan Lane with the Oinker Sisters. (First: Episode 3830)
Big Bird, Bolo, Telly, Rosita, Maria, and The Birdketeers. (First: Episode 3839)
Gloria Estefan with Rosita, alternating between English and Spanish lyrics. (First: Episode 3841)
Denyce Graves and penguins. (First: Episode 3848)
Celebrity montage featuring (1) Patti LaBelle, Elmo and the Kids; (2) Mr. Noodle and Elmo; (3) Gloria Estefan and Rosita; (4) Patti LaBelle and Elmo; (5) Nathan Lane and the Oinker Sisters; (6) Denyce Graves; (7) Bela Fleck and chickens; (8) Katie Couric, Elmo and Baby Bear; (9) Trisha Yearwood and the Martians; (10) Ben Stiller and Telly; (11) Natalie Merchant and Prairie Dawn; (12) Vanessa Williams and sheep; (13) R. E.M. and Telly; (14) Garth Brooks and Wolfgang; (15) Doug E. Doug, Telly, Baby Bear, Papa Bear and Anything Muppets; (16) Isaac Stern and Elmo; (17) Maya Angelou, Grover and Herry Monster; (18) Denyce Graves and penguins; (19) Fran Drescher and Baby Natasha; (20) Noah Wyle and Big Bird; (21) Conan O'Brien, Herry, Telly and monsters; (22) Ruby Dee and Ossie Davis with Elmo and Telly; (23) Terrell Davis with Telly and a Muppet football; (24) Rosemary Clooney and Herry. (First: Episode 3851)
Cab Callowmouse (First: Episode 3892)
Bob and Telly. (First: Episode 3949)
A sand animated segment of several animals with vocals by Stephanie D'Abruzzo. (First: Episode 3981)
Zoe, Rosita, and Lulu. (First: Episode 3983)
Alan, Big Bird, Lulu and the kids. (First: Episode 3991)
Dixie Chicks and a trio of Muppet chickens. (First: Episode 3999)
The song appears throughout the street plot of Episode 4046. Bob sings a verse during "Something in the Air," the sheep bleat the song throughout and Rosita hums the song to herself when she first appears.
Big Bird, Mr. Snuffleupagus, and The Kids. (First: Episode 4053)
Miles (First: Episode 4075)
Miles and Gabi. (First: Episode 4084)
Charlie Puth with Grover, Abby Cadabby, Cookie Monster and Elmo. (First: Episode 5005)

Specials and appearances

Image Description
Julie Andrews and Perry Como in Julie on Sesame Street. (1973)
Big Bird exits to an instrumental version of the song in Bob Hope's World of Comedy. (1976)
Big Bird at the World Puppetry Festival. (1980)
The song is used in sections during the Sesame Street cast's performance at the Daytime Emmy Awards. (1982)
Bob and Luis in Magic on Sesame Street. (1988)
The entire cast in Sesame Street: 20 and Still Counting. (1989)
A montage with (1) Patti LaBelle and (2) The Abyssinian Baptist Church Chancel Choir, (3) Barbara Cook, (4) The Kids, (5) Big Bird, (6) Elmo, (7) Jeff Goldblum and Geena Davis, (8) Forgetful Jones, (9) Count von Count, (10) Grover, (11) Wolfgang, (12) Maria and Luis, (13) Barbara Bush, (14) Cookie Monster, (15) Max Roach, (16) Kathie Lee Gifford, (17) Isaac Stern, (18) Two-Headed Monster, (19) Candice Bergen, (20) Savion, (21) Glenn Close on the special Sing! Sesame Street Remembers Joe Raposo and His Music. (1990)
A brief instrumental version accompanied the Sesame Songs Home Video opening title card. (1990)
Ladysmith Black Mambazo, the kids, and the cast in Sesame Street's 25th Birthday: A Musical Celebration. (1993)
The cast and celebrity guests (mixed with "Our Favorite Street") in Stars and Street Forever. (1994)
Big Bird and Snuffy in Big Bird Sings! (1995)
Grover, Ernie, Elmo and Cookie Monster in Music Maker (1999)
Elmo and the Pesties sing to Grizzy in The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland: Sing and Play. (1999)
School kids in Elmo's World: Singing. (2000)
Rosita and Maria on Evening at Pops. (2001)
A montage with (1) Vanessa Williams and sheep; (2) Patti LaBelle and Elmo; (3) Dixie Chicks and chickens; (4) Conan O'Brien with Herry Monster, Telly and monsters; (5) Nathan Lane and the Oinker Sisters; (6) Gloria Estefan and Rosita; (7) Denyce Graves and penguins; (8) Fran Drescher and Baby Natasha; (9) Liam Neeson and Ernie with some kids; (10) Katie Couric, Baby Bear and Elmo; (11) Ben Stiller and Telly; (12) Maya Angelou, Grover and Herry; (13) Doug E. Doug, Baby Bear, Telly, Papa Bear and Anything Muppets; (14) R.E.M. and Telly; (15) Peter Jennings and Prairie Dawn; (16) Mr. Noodle and Elmo on What's the Name of That Song? (2004)
Big Bird, Cookie Monster, Zoe, Grover, Rosita, Oscar the Grouch, Elmo and The Count, with Al Roker, Alex Trebek, Jane Pauley, Paige Davis, Lorenzo Lamas, Meredith Vieira, Emeril Lagasse and Drake Hogestyn at the 2004 Daytime Emmy Awards.
Alan Muraoka, Alison Bartlett, Emilio Delgado, Bob McGrath, Fran Brill with Zoe, Kevin Clash with Elmo, Caroll Spinney with Oscar the Grouch, Roscoe Orman, and Sonia Manzano at the Christopher Awards. (2009)
At the 2009 Daytime Emmy Awards, the cast of Sesame Street, celebrating their 40th anniversary, sang a medley of songs, including "Sing."
Rosita and Natasha Bedingfield at A Capitol Fourth. (2009)
Lucy Schwartz and Elmo at a screening of Being Elmo: A Puppeteer's Journey. (2011)
Elmo, Abby Cadabby, and Gordon at the 2012 White House Easter Egg Roll.
Sesame Workshop Benefit Gala (2012, 2013, 2014, 2017, 2021, 2022)
Gordon, Elmo and Darth Chicken at New York Comic Con. (2012)
Santino Fontana, Ernie, Bert, Rosita, Big Bird, Elmo, Abby Cadabby, and a child chorus in Christmas with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. (2014)
Billy Barkhurst (with Ernie), Eric Jacobson (with Bert), David Rudman (with Cookie Monster), Suki Lopez, Ryan Dillon (with Elmo), Leslie Carrara-Rudolph (with Abby), Carmen Osbahr (with Rosita), and Matt Vogel (with the Count) at the HBO TCA party. (2016)
Cheryl Henson, Alan Muraoka, Jennifer Barnhart (with Zoe), Brian Henson (with a Jim Henson Anything Muppet), Emilio Delgado, Matt Vogel (with the Count), Big Bird, David Rudman (with Cookie Monster), Eric Jacobson (with Oscar), Jack McBrayer, Jason Mraz, Leslie Carrara-Rudolph (with Abby Cadabby) Bobby Moynihan, Ryan Dillon (with Elmo), Drew Massey (with a penguin), Colleen Smith (with a penguin), Bill Barretta (with a penguin), and Joey Mazzarino (with Bozo) at Puppets for Puppetry. (2018)
"The Humans of Sesame Street" at Museum of the Moving Image. (2015)
Bret McKenzie, Rosita, Big Bird, Bert, Ernie, and Count von Count at The Jim Henson Retrospectacle Live in Concert. (2018)
The cast in multiple Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parades. In 2009, it was incorporated in a medley with "What Makes Music?"
In several Sesame Street Live shows including A Sesame Street Mystery: The Case of the Missing Rara Avis, Big Bird's Super Spectacular Totally Amateur Show, Around the World, Big Bird and the ABCs, and Elmo's Coloring Book.
Emilio Delgado, Matt Vogel (with the Count), Ryan Dillon (with Elmo), John Kennedy (with The Amazing Mumford), Jennifer Barnhart (with Zoe), Peter Linz (with Ernie), Tyler Bunch (with Louie), Leslie Carrara-Rudolph (with Abby), Alan Muraoka, Desiree Casado, Loretta Long, Frankie Cordero (with Rudy), Pam Arciero (with Grundgetta), Stacey Gordon (with Julia), Bryant Young, Lara MacLean (with Grover), Alison Bartlett, Sonia Manzano, Martin P. Robinson (with Telly), Fran Brill, Stephanie D'Abruzzo (with Prairie Dawn), Carmen Osbahr (with Rosita), Suki Lopez, David Rudman (with Cookie Monster), Eric Jacobson (with Oscar), and Big Bird at Caroll Spinney's retirement party.
Abby, Elmo, Alan, and a group of kids at the 2019 Daytime Emmy Awards.
Big Bird, Abby, Elmo, Ernie, Bert, Cookie Monster, and Rosita on Tiny Desk Concerts.
Elmo, Bert, Ernie, Rosita, Big Bird, Abby, and Hoots at A Swingin' Sesame Street Celebration.
The Sesame Street cast with Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Patti LaBelle, Itzhak Perlman, and Whoopi Goldberg in Sesame Street's 50th Anniversary Celebration.
Abby and Cookie Monster at the Sesame Street Sing-Along.
Elmo, Abby, Grover, Big Bird, Cookie Monster, Ernie, Bert, Thomas Rhett, Cedric the Entertainer, Lucy Liu, and Joseph Gordon-Levitt at the Kennedy Center Honors.
Elmo, Louie, Abby, Rosita, Grover, Cookie Monster, Bert, Ernie, Rudy, Prairie Dawn, Zoe, the Count, Big Bird, Telly, Mae, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Anne Hathaway, Alan, and Nina in Elmo's Playdate.

International

Image Description
On Peter Alexander präsentiert Spezialitäten Show #10 in 1975, sung by Peter Alexander, with Big Bird, Cookie Monster, Ernie, Bert, and Kermit the Frog. (YouTube)
Lidia Avila in Episodio 804 of Plaza Sésamo.
A German version has been sung for Sesamstrasse as part of the international co-production's 40th anniversary live tour 40 Jahre Sesamstrasse - Die Geburtstags-Show. (YouTube)

The Muppets

Image Description
Lena Horne with the Muppets in The Muppet Show episode 111.
Kermit and Mike Douglas in a 1977 appearance on The Mike Douglas Show.
Backstage at The Muppet Theatre, the Muppets perform the song with Rowlf at the piano while Kermit keeps Animal in beat on the drums in Because We Care.
Tony Clifton as part of a medley in The Fantastic Miss Piggy Show.
An instrumental version of the song accompanies a portion of Harry Belafonte's speech in The Muppets Celebrate Jim Henson.

Non-Muppet performances

  • Barbra Streisand on her album Live Concert at the Forum. (1972)
  • Arte Johnson leads a chorus of children in performing the song in the special Robert Young with the Young. (1973)
  • The Carpenters on their album Now & Then. The single reached #3 on the Billboard Top 100.[1] (1973)
  • Johnny Mathis on his album Killing Me Softly with Her Song. (1973)
  • Perry Como on his album And I Love You So. (1973)
  • Ray Conniff on his album You Are the Sunshine of My Life. (1973)
  • Arthur Fiedler with the Boston Pops on the album You Will Be My Music (1974), reissued on Mister Music U.S.A. (1979) and Wish Upon a Star: All-Time Children's Favorites. (1996)
  • Linnea Reese (Lily Tomlin) sang and signed the song to her deaf children in the film Nashville. (1975)
  • Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire on the album A Couple of Song and Dance Men. (1975)
  • Peter Brady (Christopher Knight) with a puppet named Collette on The Brady Bunch Variety Hour. (1977)
  • The cast of Zoom on their album Zoom Tunes (Songs From The Three-Time Emmy Award-Winning Children's TV Show). Track is listed as "Sing a Song" and performed with slightly altered lyrics. (1977)
  • Nell Carter performed the song on an episode of Gimme a Break!. (October 1986)
  • Julie Andrews and Carol Burnett: Together Again, as part of a 70s and 80s medley. (1989)
  • Erich Kunzel and the Cincinnati Pops on the album Young at Heart. (1992)
  • Fez (Wilmer Valderrama) and the cast in the That '70s Show episode "That '70s Musical." (April 2002)
  • Hugh Jackman performed a few lines from the song in a medley during the 59th Annual Tony Awards. (June 2004)
  • "With the Quickness" performed a muzak version which was heard in The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants. (2005)
  • Wing Han Tsang in the South Park episode "Wing." (March 2005)
  • Kristin Chenoweth (with new seasonal lyrics) on her album A Lovely Way to Spend Christmas. (2008)
  • Pink Martini with Emilio Delgado on their album Splendor in the Grass. (2009)
  • Jane Monheit included the song on her album The Heart of the Matter. (2013)
  • Timmy Cleary (Jack Gore) in the pilot episode of The Kids Are Alright. (2018)
  • The cast of Zoey's Extraordinary Playlist. (2021)

Videos

Sesame Street Sing

Celebrities and Muppets perform "Sing"

Sesame Street Nathan Lane Sings "Sing"

Nathan Lane and the Oinker Sisters

Sesame Street Gloria & Rosita Sing A Song

Gloria Estefan and Rosita

Releases

Big Bird and friends perform "Sing," in honor of the song's composer Joe Raposo, as seen on the cover of a 1992 tribute album.

"Sing," illustration by Joe Mathieu.

Audio
  • The Official Sesame Street 2 Book-and-Record Album
    (1971, The Kids)
  • Someday, Little Children/Sing
    (single, 1971)
  • Sing/The Electric Company Theme
    (single, 1972)
  • Sesame Street LIVE!
    (1973, Bob and the Cast)
  • Sing the Hit Songs of Sesame Street
    (1974, The Kids)
  • ¡Sesame Mucho!
    (1974, Los Niños)
  • Bert & Ernie Sing-Along
    (1975, Bert and the Company)
  • 25 Greatest Hits
    (1975, The Kids)
  • Sing/What's the Name of That Song?
    (single, 1976)
  • No Matter What Your Language/Canta (Sing)
    (single, 1976)
  • 10th Anniversary Album
    (1978, The Kids)
  • Sing Sang Song Singalong
    (1978, Skye Blue)
  • Sesame Disco!
    (1979, The Girls)
  • Sing (disco version)/The Happiest Street in the World
    (single, 1979)
  • Bob's Favorite Street Songs
    (1991, Bob McGrath)
  • Sing: Songs of Joe Raposo
    (1992, the Carpenters and a new recording featuring Muppets and Kids)
  • Sesame Street Celebrates!
    (1994, Ladysmith Black Mambazo, the Kids, and the Cast of Sesame Street)
  • Platinum All-Time Favorites
    (1995, The Kids)
  • The Bird is the Word!
    (1995, Big Bird and the Kids)
  • The Best of Elmo
    (1997, Elmo, Big Bird, Telly, Hoots the Owl, Grover and the Kids)
  • Elmo's Coloring Book
    (1997, Oscar and the Company)
  • Fiesta Songs!
    (1998, ¡Sesame Mucho! version)
  • For the Kids
    (2002, The Ivy)
  • Songs from the Street: 35 Years of Music
    (2003, original album version and the Dixie Chicks version)
  • Ha-Ha-Ha Sesame Street
    (2005, Japanese)
  • I Will Be with You
    (2006, Japanese)
  • Sesame Street Playground
    (2008, The Kids)
  • ¡C es para Canta!
    (2018, The Sesame Street Kids)
  • All-Time Favorites 1
    (2018, The Sesame Street Kids)
  • Big Bird's Best!
    (2019, Big Bird)
  • S is for Sing!
    (2019, Elmo and the cast)
Video
  • Muppet Moments
    (1985, Lena Horne)
  • Sing Along
    (1987, Olivia and Linda)
  • Sesame Street: 25 Wonderful Years
    (1993, Ladysmith Black Mambazo and the Cast)
  • Big Bird Sings!
    (1995, Big Bird and Snuffy)
  • The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland: Sing and Play
    (1999, Elmo and the Pesties)
  • What's the Name of That Song? (2004, celebrity montage)
  • Elmo's Animal Adventures
    (2009, sand cartoon during credits)
  • 40 Years of Sunny Days
    (2009, celebrity montage)
  • Elmo's Music Magic
    (2011, sand cartoon)
  • Best of Friends
    (2012, Gloria Estefan and Rosita)
  • 50 Years and Counting
    (2019, Bob and the Two-Headed Monster)
Publications
  • Sesame Street Songbook Vol. 2
  • The Sesame Street Songbook (1971, 1992, 2007)
  • Sesame Street LIVE! (1973)
  • Songs of Sesame Street (1977)
  • The Reader's Digest Children's Songbook (1986)
  • Sesame Street Unpaved (1998)
Online
  • Sesamestreet.org
    • Sand Animals: (sesamestreet.org)
    • Gloria Estefan and Rosita: (sesamestreet.org)
  • SesameStreet's YouTube Channel
    • Bob and Luis, with Susan and the kids (YouTube)
    • Lily Tomlin with the kids (YouTube)
    • Gloria Estefan and Rosita (YouTube)
    • Denyce Graves and penguins (YouTube)
    • Nathan Lane and the Oinker Sisters (YouTube)
    • Sand Cartoon (YouTube)
    • Charlie Puth (YouTube)

Sources

  1. The Greatest TV Moments: Sesame Street Music A-Z

Community content is available under CC-BY-SA unless otherwise noted.

Sesame Street Songs Home Video (Series)

http://tvtropes. org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/series/sesamestreetsongshomevideo

Following

Go To

Sing a song.

Sesame Songs Home Video was a Direct to Video sing-along series by Random House Home Video and the Children's Television Workshop focusing specifically on Sesame Street songs. It was a spinoff to My Sesame Street Home Video.

Titles are listed based on their original "proof of purchase" numbering.

#1 - Monster Hits

Join Herry Monster and Elmo and they host The Fuzzy Awards for the best monster song.

  1. Fur
  2. Herry's Family Song - Herry Monster and Friends
  3. Frazzle's Emotion Song - The Frazzletones with Frazzle
  4. Two Heads are Better than One - Herry Monster with the Two-Headed Monster
  5. Fuzzy and Blue (and Orange) - Grover, Herry, Cookie Monster, and Frazzle
  6. Comb Your Face - Furline Huskie
  7. Furry Blue Mommy of Mine - Herry Monster
  8. Healthy Food - Cookie Monster and the Fly Girls
  9. What Do I Do When I'm Alone? - Grover
  10. We Are All Monsters - The Furtones
  11. C Is for Cookie (Fuzzy Award Winner) - Cookie Monster

#2 - Sing Yourself Silly!

Come enjoy some silly songs to make yourself laugh and say Now that was silly! James Taylor sings Jellyman Kelly, Ernie does his favorite jamboree, "The Honker Duckie Dinger Jamboree," and celebrities help Ernie to Put Down the Duckie while playing the saxophone. Features appearances by Big Bird, Gladys the Cow, Forgetful Jones, The Count, Elmo, and Oscar the Grouch.

  1. The Honker Duckie Dinger Jamboree - Ernie, Honkers, Dinger, and Rubber Duckie
  2. The Ladybugs' Picnic - Jim Kweskin
  3. Jellyman Kelly - James Taylor and Kids
  4. Wavin' Goodbye to You With My Heart - Polly Darton
  5. Old MacDonald Cantata - Honkers, Dinger, Fluffy the Elephant and Yip-Yip Martian.
  6. Everything Is All in a Wrong Place Ball - Oscar and Grungetta
  7. One Banana - Anything Muppets and the Bananas
  8. Calcutta Joe - Jim Thurman
  9. Mary Had a Bicycle - Don Music with the Monotones and Kermit the Frog
  10. Ten Tiny Turtles - Steve Zuckerman
  11. Put Down the Duckie - Ernie, Hoots, and the celebrities.

#3 - Rock and Roll!

Join your VJ Wolf, Jackman Wolf, as he hosts The Sesame Street Rock and Roll Request show. Will Little Jerry and the Monotones make it to the studio and perform Telephone Rock live on the show?

  1. Monster in the Mirror - Grover
  2. Telephone Rock - Little Jerry and the Monotones
  3. You're Alive - Little Chrissy and the Alphabeats
  4. Rock and Roll Readers - Little Chrissy and the Alphabeats
  5. It's Hip to Be a Square - The Four Sides
  6. Count up to Nine - Count Von Count and the Royal Transylvanians
  7. 40 Blocks from My Home - Farley
  8. (I Can't Get No) Cooperation - The Cobble Stones
  9. Hand Talk - The Talking Hands
  10. The Word is NO! - Maria and Gina

    —Note: This volume is dedicated to the memory of Jim Henson (1936-1990)

#4 - Dance Along!

Join Big Bird, Gina and Mike as they host a Dance Along party.

  1. The New Way To Walk - The Oinker Sisters
  2. A Very Simple Dance - Mike and the kids
  3. The Batty Bat - Count Von Count and the Bats
  4. The "STOP" Dance - Anne Marie and Skeeter Rabbit
  5. The Birdcall Boogie - Hoots the Owl
  6. The Alphabet Disco Song - Grover
  7. Doing the Pigeon - Bert
  8. The Any Way You Feel Dance
  9. The Birdland Jump - Joe Williams

#5 - Sing, Hoot, and Howl with the Sesame Street Animals

Join Big Bird and his animal friends as they show some of their favorite animal songs.

  1. Cow Dog Song - Fred Wardenberg
  2. Baa Baa Bamba - Luis and the Sheep, Gladys the Cow, and other animals.
  3. Starfish
  4. Insects in Your Neighborhood - Ernie
  5. I'm an Aardvark - Joe Raposo
  6. Being a Pig
  7. Proud to Be a Cow - Gladys the Cow
  8. We are all Earthlings
  9. What are Kids called?
  10. Which came first (The Chicken or the Egg)?
  11. Cluck Around the Clock - Little Chrissy and the Alphabeats

#6 Elmo's Sing-Along Guessing Game

Join Elmo as he hosts his own game show. Today's contestants are: Mary, Mary's Little Lamb, and Mr. Johnson. Songs include:

  1. I Love My Elbows - Kermit the Frog
  2. One Fine Face - Ernie and Elmo
  3. Get Along - Kermit the Frog with the Anything Muppets, The Yip Yip Martians, The Twiddle Bugs, and a cow.
  4. Elmo's Song - Elmo
  5. The Alligator King - Bud Luckey and Turk Murphy
  6. Eight Balls of Fur - Little Chrissy
  7. My Best Friend, Big Bird and Snuffy, Uncle Wally and Mrs. Trump, Susan and Gordan
  8. I Love Trash - Oscar the Grouch
  9. Lambaba - Count Von Count and the Sheep

#7 - We All Sing Together

Join Telly and Herry Monster, your Monster on the Spot reporters, on how kids sing together. Songs includes:

  1. Skin
  2. Fixing My Hair
  3. Face Rap
  4. I Wanna Be Me - Cecille the Ball
  5. Dancing Shoes
  6. Mom and Me
  7. Different Yet the Same - Buster the Horse and Gladys the Cow
  8. No Matter What
  9. We all Sing with the Same Voice

    —Note: This volume was dedicated to the memory of Richard Hunt (1951-1992)

#8 - Sing-Along Earth Songs

Join Grover and the kids at Camp Wannagohoma as they explain about the environment. Songs include:

  1. Everybit the Litter Hurts - Lillias White
  2. Throw it My Way - Oscar the Grouch
  3. Air - Bip Bippadotta and the Anything Muppets
  4. Willie Wimple (Water Pollution)
  5. On My Pond - Kermit the Frog and the fish
  6. The Little Plant - Ernie
  7. The Box City Recycling Rap
  8. Oscar's Junk Band - Oscar and the grouches
  9. Keep the Park Clean for the Pigeons - Bert
  10. The Wasteroon Song - Andrea Martin
  11. What a Gift - Big Bird (from Episode 2884)

Sesame Songs Provides Examples of:
  • Mid-Vid Skit: On Monster Hits and Rock and Roll, they use the MTV Captions of the song.
  • Signing-Off Catchphrase: During the credits to Rock and Roll, Jackman Wolf signs off by saying, "All right, everybody. Until next time, this is Jackman Wolf, Saying Thanks for watching! And Toodle-looooooooooooo!"

Billie Eilish came to Sesame Street and sang her hit there with Count Dracula

https://ria. ru/20211111/eilish-1758413323.html

Count Dracula

Billy Eilish came to Sesame Street and sang her hit with Count Dracula Eilish became a guest of the children's educational program "Sesame Street" and sang one of her hits there along with Count Dracula von Znak... RIA Novosti, 11/11/2021

2021-11-11T06: 36

2021-11-11T06: 36

2021-11-11T06: 36

Culture

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Billy Ailish

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Moscow, Nov. American singer Billy Eilish became a guest of the children's educational program "Sesame Street" and sang one of her hits there along with Count Dracula von Znak (aka Count Znak). In the music video posted to YouTube, the pop star and Graf perform the ballad "Happier Than Ever" from Eilish's self-titled album. The original lyrics have been slightly altered. In a relaxing and melodic setting, the duo begin to teach young viewers about the number "two" and count items such as Bert's slippers, apples, and sweaters (the yellow doll in "Sesame Street"). The song ends with Eilish and Graf singing the closing chorus while counting to two. According to Variety, this excerpt will be included in the upcoming 52nd season of the popular children's show. It launches November 11 on Cartoonito and HBO Max. The full episode featuring Billie Eilish is scheduled to air on June 16, 2022. nine0003

https://ria.ru/20191012/15596666602.html

RIA Novosti

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culture news, music, lifestyle, billie eilish

culture, culture news, music, lifestyle, billie eilish

MOSCOW, November 11 - RIA Novosti. American singer Billy Eilish became a guest of the children's educational program "Sesame Street" and sang one of her hits there along with Count Dracula von Znak (aka Count Znak). nine0003

The music video posted on YouTube features the pop star and Graf performing the ballad "Happier Than Ever" from Eilish's album of the same name. The original text of the composition was slightly altered.

In a relaxing and melodic setting, the duo begin to teach young viewers about the number two and count various items such as Bert's slippers, apples and sweaters (the yellow doll in Sesame Street).

The song ends with Eilish and Graf singing the closing chorus while counting to two. nine0003

According to Variety, this clip will be included in the upcoming 52nd season of the popular children's show. It launches November 11 on Cartoonito and HBO Max. The full episode featuring Billie Eilish is scheduled to air on June 16, 2022.

October 12, 2019, 06:45Culture Article

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From 'Sing' to 'Put Down the Duckie' and more. Sesame Street has produced so many hits over the past half century that even the Earl would have a hard time keeping up with them. In addition to new songs written for the series, the classic children's program has also created an impressive number of song parodies, often performed by the original artists themselves. Here are 13 of the greatest and most stupid of all time.

1. "My Triangle"

James Blunt captivated melancholy teenagers and mainstream radio worldwide with his raucous ballad "You're Beautiful" in 2005, complete with a music video of him undressing on a snow-covered rock and diving into the icy waters below ( presumably at his death). Although it was initially too painful for preschoolers, Sesame Street The Long Lost Triangle version replaces Angel featuring corners and depicts an anthropomorphic triangle that appears after Blunt has lost hope of ever seeing his friend again. Blunt helped write the melody, adding some cheeky geometric jargon to the song: "It must be those angles that put a smile on your face, not to mention the hypotenuse. "

how big is the international space station nine0199

2. "Hey Food"

With some help, The Beetles Cookie Monster turns the Beatles' "Hey Jude" into a sweet ode to food that will probably make you feel more like the manic-eyed monster than ever before. The track's main themes include the inability to choose what food you want, the inability to stop snacking, and the recognition that food - whether it's "dry toast or something wetter" - always makes us feel better.

3. "Hi Sammy!" nine0189

Carol Channing takes on this sizzling parody with such flair you'd think she won a Tony Award for playing Dolly in a Broadway play. Hello Dolly! (she did). With lots of lingering S sounds and a cuddly Muppet snake named "Sammy", the song serves as a way to teach youth how to pronounce them S And an advertising campaign to combat the widespread cultural notion that snakes are just evil.

4. "Born to Add"

"Born to Add" by Bruce Stringbin and the S. Street Band somehow manages to capture all the rock 'n' roll energy of the desperate working-class youth in Bruce Springsteen's "Born to Run" and turn it into simple arithmetic. . The leather-clad lead singer and his associates roam the neighborhood counting cars, trash cans and cops, and the track culminates in Clarissa's fiery saxophone solo and a dance party that even cops take part in. Stringbean also executes "Barn". in the USA", featuring an onomatopoeic choir of backing vocalists. nine0003

5. "Slime to the Moon"

Tony Bennett's parody of the classic crooner "Fly Me to the Moon" talks about the astronaut Slimey's training and subsequent launch into space, explaining that a worm "has to be nervous/needs guts and stickiness / When everything goes upside down. While the phrase "Let him crawl through mud and dung / on Jupiter or Mars" may not be scientifically accurate, the idea of ​​sending a worm into space isn't that far off - scientists studied them on the International Space Station to understand how microgravity affects anatomy. muscles. nine0003

6. "It's not heavy, it's my feather"

It doesn't matter which version of "He Ain't Heavy, He's My Brother" you listen to - Hollies, Neil Diamond or someone else - it will most likely be slow dark and full of emotion. The opposite is true for Sesame Street Performed - A buoyant country song performed by an animated chicken who looks and sounds suspiciously like Dolly Parton. In it, she lists a bunch of quirky and heavy items she doesn't take on a trip (anchors, anvils, hippos, chests of drawers, etc.) and discusses the merits of packing her feathers, which, you guessed it, isn't heavy. nine0003

7. "You're really holding me."

Smokey Robinson spends a good three minutes trying to keep his composure as he looks the letter in the eye. U tries to embrace him with an iron grip and no concept of boundaries. In addition to swapping U in the original song for U , songwriter Christopher Cerf added some suitable U words to illustrate the situation, including " U means uptight / That's how I feel / That's how I feel / that you were grabbed for a letter, unpleasant. nine0003

8. "Eighteen Sandwiches"

Although you have to go through puberty to truly identify with Alice Cooper's disturbing anthem "I'm Eighteen", Sesame Street Parody is something even toddlers can understand. In the animated video, the girl tries to decide which sandwich to choose for lunch, hesitating over "tuna, turkey, peanut butter, grilled cheese or salami/ham or jelly, chicken salad, minced liver, pastrami", etc.. As our poor, conflicted heroine flips through her list of 18 choices, you might be wondering, "Which home kitchen is stocked with all these ingredients?" or "I would like my child to love even two different types of sandwiches." In the end, she gives up on the whole puzzle, opting for the pizza, which, depending on who you ask, is really just an open-faced sandwich. nine0003

9. "I want it (but I'm waiting)"

If any Muppet was born to embody the spirit of Icona Pop's crazy "I Love It" collaboration with Charli XCX, it was Cookie Monster. His chaotic nature sets the perfect tone for "I Want (But I Wait)", a catchy number about the importance of delayed gratification. In Sesame Street , the music video lives up to the original almost scene by scene, featuring graffiti alleys, lyrics flashing on screen, and neon-lit dance parties. "Me Want It (But Me Wait)" ends with Cookie Monster devouring a well-deserved cookie, and it's probably safe to assume that the party members in the Icona Pop video end their night of fun with a snack. nine0003

10. "Don't Take Your Guns to Town"

"Don't Take Your Guns to Town" is Johnny Cashian's own story about a young shepherd named Billy Joe who ignores his mother's pleas to leave his guns at home and ends up dying in a short a bar fight after tasting liquor for the first time. In the Sesame Street Parody, on the other hand, Big Bird is depicted as "Big Bird", a "cow bird" heading into town while counting the number of units, and receives an alarm when Count von Graf and the Countess indicate that he is not knows how to count more than one. Instead of shooting him on the spot or something, they offer to be his friend and teach him how to count, making this parody number one on Johnny Cash's short list of happy songs. nine0003

11. "Kids just love brushing their teeth"

All it takes to be skeptical of the theory that girls just want to have fun is to hear Cyndi Lauper's new wave classic on the subject once. In the 90s, Sesame Street tried to harness the power of an infectious pop song and use it to sell kids something that hardly has a reputation for being funny: brushing their teeth. "Kids Just Love to Brush" is a Lauper-style muppet who jumps up and down with his friends and hums lyrics like "It's a party every time we brush our teeth." nine0003

12. "Being a square is trendy"

While the transition to "My Triangle" from "You're Beautiful" may have required some extra imagination, turning Huey Lewis and News into "Trendy Square" with a literal square Seems like too great an opportunity to pass up.


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