"Bomb Iran" (or "Bomb, Bomb, Bomb, Bomb, Bomb Iran") is the name of several parodies of the Regents' 1961 song "Barbara Ann", originally written by Fred Fassert and popularized in a "party" cover version by the Beach Boys in 1965. The most popular of the parodies was recorded by Vince Vance & the Valiants in 1980. "Bomb Iran" gained a resurgence in notoriety in 2007 during John McCain's 2008 presidential campaign.
A second version, with different lyrics, aired on KIXS-FM (now KGSR) in Killeen, Texas (which broadcasts to the military institution Fort Hood) for a single weekend in January 1980.[1] At least five more "Bomb Iran" songs were written and copyrighted in 1980.[3][4][5] The lyrics have the line "Went to a mosque, gonna throw some rocks...Tell the Ayatollah...'Gonna put you in a box!'", which refers to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.[6][7]
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The most popular version of "Bomb Iran" was recorded by Vince Vance & the Valiants in 1980.[12] The single was popular and frequently requested on the radio, but never charted because it lacked distribution and the rights to the music were not properly acquired.[13] The song also provoked death threats and other altercations against the lead singer.[14] However, after some legal wrangling, the single was finally re-released by Paid Records in September 1980.[15] After its second release, the song reached number 101 on the Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart.[16] The 1980 recording, along with a 1987 remix, was eventually included in the band's album I Know What it Means to Miss New Orleans, released in 1996.[17]
One year after the original single release, in 1981, the band released another parody on the same topic called "Nuke Iran", to the tune of Gene Chandler's "Duke of Earl".[18] In 2005, they created a similarly themed parody of the Coasters' song "Yakety Yak", this time with Iraq as the target, called "Yakety Yak (Bomb Iraq)".[19] Foreshadowing this, The Rush Limbaugh Show in 1990 featured a parody of "Barbara Ann" called "Bomb Iraq" following the start of the Gulf War.[20]
The parody lived on and became political fodder when, on April 17, 2007, in Senator John McCain's (R-AZ) campaign for the 2008 presidential election, at an appearance in Murrells Inlet, South Carolina, he responded to an audience question about military action against Iran by referring to "that old Beach Boys song, 'Bomb Iran'", then singing the parody chorus, "Bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb, anyway, ah ..."[21][22] McCain later claimed he was only joking, but his opponents used his comments against him throughout the 2008 campaign.[23]
ABC News senior national correspondent Steve Osunsami wanted to get to the bottom of the stories surrounding the massacre and its connection to The Gap Band's song, so he went straight to the source in Tulsa.
Bomb Rush Blush is a fast-paced and exuberant pop song, mirroring Callie's energetic and playful personality. It can be assumed through the title and in-game dialogue that the song's lyrics are about Callie using a Bomb Rush, although the actual lyrics are nonsensical. The song was first revealed on 29 April 2016 during the second live Squid Sisters performance at Cho-Ongakusai 2016, alongside Marie's solo song, Tide Goes Out. The following day, it was revealed that the new songs would be unlockable with the newly-revealed Squid Sisters amiibo figures,[1] which were released on 8 July 2016. Scanning them in Splatoon allows the player to watch performances of Squid Sisters songs as if they were in a Splatfest, and Bomb Rush Blush is exclusive to the Callie amiibo. During the performance, Marie simply sits down, while Callie performs her song solo.
During Splatoon 2's final mission, Callie briefly sings some translated lyrics. Although the lyrics are sensical, in Japanese, they are being translated from Octarian as Callie's singing is written exclusively in katakana. It is unknown which Inkling lyrics these lines correspond to. Additionally, not all languages have translated these lines as actual lyrics to a song, so the tables below list the closest equivalents.
The song was rearranged in Splatoon 2 by Ryo Nagamatsu, where it is credited to DJ Octavio with Callie as a featured artist. During Splatoon 2's final battle (in which the subtitle of the mission is named after the song), Agent 4 arrives to meet a brainwashed Callie, who is revealed to be working with DJ Octavio, who brags about how he "remixed" Callie's brain, and in addition, her song. Together, they perform the song as they battle Agent 4, with Callie using Bomb Rush Specials with oversized gold Splat Bombs to coincide with the song. The song plays during the first two phases before it changes to Tidal Rush for phase three.
This remix is a complete transformation, taking it almost 20 beats per minute faster with a new instrumental that barely resembles the original. Aside from the vocals (which were reused), the track consists exclusively of orchestral samples over a jarring drum and bass break. Most of the track steers clear of the original tonal center and reharmonizes the melody to sound dissonant and foreboding. Many of the symphonic samples used are recordings of complete phrases from a vintage sample library that are crudely spliced and looped, creating a mangled and artificial sound that suits Octavio's musical interest as a DJ.[2] It also incorporates the melody from the Hero Mode - Onward! jingle heard after beating a mission, which has become the Octarian leitmotif. Near the middle of the song, record spin samples can be heard, reflecting Octavio's wasabi stalks scratching his turntables.
The song Tidal Rush by DJ Octavio, featuring Callie vs. Marie, is a mashup of Bomb Rush Blush and Marie's Tide Goes Out in the same style as the aforementioned DJ Octavio remix, the main difference being the return to functional harmony and a more emotional and uplifting mood. The drum break and tempo remain consistent with the previous track to ensure a seamless transition in-game.
In Splatoon 2, although the song is presumably about the Bomb Rush which was removed in the game, a jingle playing the melody of Bomb Rush Blush can be heard whilst using the Bomb Launcher. However, it is only noticeable in Recon mode and the Shooting Range due to all the interfering noises in multiplayer battles.[4]
"Bomb Bomb" is a song recorded by South Korean co-ed group KARD. It was released by DSP Media and distributed by Kakao M on March 27, 2019, as a digital single. A music video for the song was also released on the same day.
"Bomb Bomb" topped the iTunes K-pop singles chart in 21 countries including emerging markets such as Brazil, Mexico, France, and Spain, as well as big markets such as the United States and Great Britain. The song also placed at number 20th on iTunes worldwide chart, and also on the iTunes Singles Chart at number 44th in the US and at number 69th in the UK.[2]
"That old Beach Boys song, 'Bomb Iran?"' McCain asked with a laugh after a member of a South Carolina audience railed against Iran during last year's primaries and asked when the U.S. would attack. Then the candidate began to sing, "Bomb-bomb-bomb ... " before breaking it off.
John Mayer may be the king of romantic ballads, but the singer's latest song features a love interest we can probably all relate to: Lush Cosmetics bath bombs. Specifically, Mayer penned (and sang) an ode to the Big Sleep Jelly Bomb, which launched last summer to much fanfare.
For the unfamiliar, bath bombs sometimes seem like they were invented specifically for Instagram (plus a nice glass of wine after a long day's work, naturally). They're colorful, they smell nice, and they bubble pleasantly when dropped into a big tub of water. The Jelly Bomb is particularly satisfying because sodium alginate formulated in the ball turns the water into a thick pool of Jell-O, leaving your skin noticeably softened.
Mayer was so moved by the life-changing power of bath bombs that he penned a song about it with his guitar (played with his newly softened hand calluses). His first experience with the bath bomb life was with the Intergalactic Bath Bomb, but the song is really dedicated to that jelly goodness.
"Jelly bombs excreting/ All the things my body's needing/ As I climb into the bath/ Because my back just took a beating," he sings with a tie-dye blue and green backdrop of a relaxing bath in the making. He later sets the whole thing to guitar, and honestly, I would purchase it for 99 cents in the iTunes store. Unsurprisingly, Twitter feels the same.
The story of how the blue whales were found can be traced all the way back to the 1940s, when human beings discovered they could unlock the terrible power of the atom. After the US Trinity test and the bombing of Japan, decades of instability and fear followed, as nations raced to build their own arsenals and test ever-more powerful weapons.
Recently, however, the IMS nuclear network has uncovered much more than big bangs. Over the past decade or so, as scientific access to the data has opened up, researchers have turned to the IMS to sense events that might otherwise go unnoticed. That includes the songs of whales, but also much more.
In 2021, bioacoustician Emmanuelle Leroy at the University of New South Wales, in Sydney, and colleagues analysed the songs of various whale populations in the central Indian ocean. A few years prior, a new song had been noticed, known as the "Chagos song", or "Diego Garcia Downsweep", named after the place it was detected: the Diego Garcia atoll in the Chagos archipelago.
At the time, five blue whale pods were known in the Indian Ocean, along with populations of Omura's whales. But it wasn't clear which group the Chagos song belonged to. Scientists know that each pod has strongly personalised calls, which means they can be sorted into "acoustic populations", and this one did not match. 2351a5e196
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