"Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh! (A Letter from Camp)" is a novelty song recorded by Allan Sherman released in 1963. The melody is taken from the ballet Dance of the Hours from the opera La Gioconda by Amilcare Ponchielli, while the lyrics were written by Sherman and Lou Busch.

In 2020, the song was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation in the United States National Recording Registry for being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".[2] The song's mention of "Leonard Skinner", a boy at the camp who "got ptomaine poisoning last night after dinner", was an inspiration for the name of the band Lynyrd Skynyrd, although the band's name was also inspired by a physical education instructor of the same name.[3]


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The song is a parody that complains about the fictional "Camp Granada" and is set to the tune of Amilcare Ponchielli's Dance of the Hours, from the opera La Gioconda.[1] The name derives from the first lines:

The song scored No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 list for three weeks beginning on August 24, 1963. It was kept from No. 1 by both "Fingertips" by "Little" Stevie Wonder and "My Boyfriend's Back" by The Angels.[4] This song hit number 1 in Hong Kong, where there were no summer camps in existence, according to Alan Sherman in his book A Gift of Laughter (1965). Sherman wrote a new "back at Camp Granada" version, "Hello Muddah, Hello Fadduh! 64",[5] for a May 27, 1964, performance on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. Sherman began that version by giving a camp whistle, followed by his spelling Granada's name, and then sticks out his tongue. In that version, the narrator is back at camp, recovering from his compound fracture, where some things, like the food have improved, "because the little black things in it are not moving". However, no one knows where his bunk, trunk, or the skunk is. The narrator wishes that the showers, that have thin doors, were moved indoors. The narrator takes swimming lessons from an overweight woman. ("A Whale in a Bikini"). Lenny Bruce was scheduled to entertain there at the camp. The narrator loves the camp, missing the poker games, and requesting Unguentine. The narrator is taking care of his once homesick younger brother, who does not know how to blow his nose, and who has a bedwetting problem. This version was released as a single in 1964. It reached #18 on Canada's CHUM Charts.[6] Sherman wrote a third version for, and acted in, a 1965 TV commercial for a board game about Camp Granada, a "real rotten camp".[7] The original version also reached #9 on the Pop-Standard Singles chart.[8]

The song won the 1964 Grammy Award for Best Comedy Performance.[9] It was played frequently on the Dr. Demento Show and is featured on the Rhino Records compilation album, Dr. Demento 20th Anniversary Collection. It was played over the end credits of the 1993 film Indian Summer and was briefly heard in The Simpsons episode "Marge Be Not Proud" after Bart Simpson switches the family's answering machine cassette tapes, to which Homer got confused and assumed it was Lisa phoning from a summer camp. It was featured in the final scene of The King of Queens episode "Tube Stakes", during which main character Arthur Spooner performs his morning stretches. The song is sung by some of the characters on the TV series 7th Heaven near the end of the episode "No Weddings and a Funeral" where it is mentioned to be Mrs. Camden's late mother's favorite song.

The song remains a favorite at summer camps; despite Sherman largely being forgotten on oldies radio, the song has passed down through the oral tradition through parents and camp counselors, an example of a song maintaining popularity through means other than mass media.[10]

Variations of the song include adaptations in Swedish ("Brev frn kolonien" by Cornelis Vreeswijk), Finnish ("Terve mutsi, terve fatsi, tss teidn ihmelapsi") and Norwegian ("Brev fra leier'n" by Birgit Strm). The Finnish version is included in the Finnish Boy Scouts' songbook. The Swedish version notably does not revolve around the camper hating the camp, but is about the kids running roughshod over it and having run off all the counselors, one of whom has committed suicide after they let a snake into the mess hall, and the organizer of the camp being arrested by police after the kids start a forest fire. The song begins with the boy writing the letter asking his parents to send more money, because he has lost all his pocket money playing dice with the other campers. The song then ends with the boy having to wrap up the letter as he is about to join the others in burning down the neighboring camp lodge.

i can't remember the name of the band, song or any of the lyrics but he is singing about his brother or close friend that committed suicide and at one point the instruments cut out and its just raw screaming about the loss of his loved one. i've been looking for weeks

The ending of the song appears on the Main Menu of Halo: Combat Evolved and the opening and closing cutscenes of The Pillar of Autumn. It plays twice during the level Halo; once during the Covenant's last attempt to eliminate the first group of survivors, and again on the Covenant's attempt to kill the very last group of survivors. It also plays four times during the level The Truth and Reconciliation, once outside the ship, once when entering the loading bay, once near the brig where Captain Keyes is being held, and during the ending cutscene. It also plays in the Shuttle bay if all, or nearly all, of the Marines are dead, when Cortana will call Echo 419 for reinforcements; opening the bay will cause the song to play. This song's ending is exactly the same as the opening to the Halo 2 track "Impend."

The first time the song plays is when John-117 and Cortana abandon the UNSC Pillar of Autumn, and its tone is suitably martial for the situation. It opens with a synthetic drum beat; starting at 00:06, the melody of the piece begins on the flute. At 00:32, the melody segues over to strings, who continue the piece's main motif an octave lower. They are shortly joined by a fanfare on synth organ. At 01:00, the drums fade out, allowing the strings and flute to slow the tempo and bring the piece in for its serene conclusion.

The third season of I Think You Should Leave has arrived and with it, a new anthem that might make you wake up, move your head all around and realize that there just might be no rules. The song appears in the final sketch of the fourth episode and caps off the new friendship of a sartorially connected duo (played by Biff Wiff and Tim Robinson).

"Best Friend's Brother" (also known as "B.F.B." and "Best Friend's Brother (BFB)") is a song performed by American actress and singer Victoria Justice, co-written with Savan Kotecha and its producer Kool Kojak, for the Nickelodeon television series Victorious. It was originally released on Idolator on May 16, 2011, and later commercially re-released on May 20, as the third single from the series' soundtrack album, Victorious: Music from the Hit TV Show, on which it was included as the third track.[1][2]

"Best Friend's Brother" was exclusively released on the Idolator website on May 16, 2011. The same day, Victoria Justice announced on her website the song would be released four days later on iTunes and Celebuzz revealed its cover artwork.[3] The song was also later available on the Nickelodeon website.[4] Columbia Records and Nickelodeon confirmed it would be the third track on the soundtrack album, released under the title Victorious: Music from the Hit TV Show on August 2.[5]

"Best Friend's Brother" was performed by Tori Vega (portrayed by Victoria Justice) with Cat Valentine (portrayed by Ariana Grande) and Andr Harris (portrayed by Leon Thomas III) in the episode "Prom Wrecker", that premiered on May 21, 2011. They perform this song at "Prome" hosted by Tori at Hollywood Arts High School. The song doesn't affect the episode's main plot.

Victoria Justice co-wrote "Best Friend's Brother" based on her own experience, which she spoke about in an interview with Tiger Beat during the premiere of "iParty with Victorious". She had a crush on her best friend's brother and wanted him to know about it, but didn't want her friend to know about this feeling. However, her friend knew there was some chemistry between her brother and Justice. After creating the song, the singer played it to her without telling her what it was about. Her friend remarked the song might be about her brother, to which Justice replied "Maybe".

The singer also spoke to Seventeen about the song's inspiration: "When I was around 14 years old, in 8th grade, I had this crush on my best friend's brother. He was two years older than me. It was one of those things where I would go over her house and we would all play Halo 2 together and go swimming in the pool and stuff. I think we both had little crushes on each other, but it never went anywhere. If it had, it would have been really weird. I wouldn't have been willing to risk my friendship for dating her brother. Friendship is always more important."[6]

In an exclusive clip for Teen.com, Justice revealed the inspiration for the song came to her suddenly during a writing session with Kool Kojak and Savan Kotecha when they had no idea what to write a new song about. According to her, they didn't understand the inspiration, but the singer said, "Trust me, I get it. I've been through this. We're writing the song."[7] "Best Friend's Brother" is believed to be written between July 21 and August 10, 2010, based on Justice's tweets, which include pictures from the songwriting sessions with Kojak and Kotecha.[8][9][10] After hearing and falling in love with the song, Dan Schneider, the creator of Victorious, asked her about using it in the series.[11] ff782bc1db

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