Online Encore Game
Oct. 12th, 2008 08:46 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
You can blame Shmuel for this. Actually, he has other people to pass the thanks or blame on to, but I would not have found it were it not for him.
Anyway, there is a board game (and parlor game) called Encore, in which the object is to sing a portion of a song containing the challenge word. You have to include at least eight consecutive words for it to count. What makes this fun for the challenger (in this case, me) is to try to come up with words that aren't found in a lot of songs. To make it more challenging, you are supposed to do this from memory, not via google or your music collection.
I've come up with a bit of a scoring variation, as you will see, and have in mind actual physical prizes. (I hesitate to say "valuable prizes" as value is in the eye of the beholder.)
Rules: Use the comments to include your snippet of lyrics. I will award 1 point each for lyrics, name of song, and source (either performer or, in the case of lyrics from musicals, name of the musical). If you come up with a song other than the one I had in mind, I'll give a bonus point. I reserve the right to award other bonus points for any extraordinary cleverness I think deserves them.
None of the words are in the titles of the songs I have in mind. All of the songs are primarily in English. A few of these should be insanely easy, but a couple are pretty obscure. It might help if you know that I tried to mix things up by not using more than one song from any given source.
The game will run no longer than a week, at the end of which I will award prizes for first, second and third place. I also reserve the right to provide clues.
Words are bolded if nobody has gotten them. I will unbold them when there is a successful lyric and italicize when there are also successful guesses for song title and source. Strikethrough means that somebody has gotten the song I had in mind (and the song title and source).
Here is an a to z list of challenge words (including a few proper nouns) for your consideration:
Asada
betel
compos mentis
defrocked
Elderhostel
fart
G-man
Hudson
Idaho
Joliet
kaleidoscope
limestone
masticating
Nikon
OD
polyethylene
queer
rhubarb
savannah
Thoreau
usherette
verandahs
Weight Watchers
Xerox
Yorick
zamboni
Hints, Take 1:
3 of the songs, including 2 of the bolded ones, are by singers from north of the Firth of Forth. Two are by people who would, if they were alive, be annoyed with the Dodgers this month.
One is by a group named after a city in Africa and another was written by somebody whose name includes a European capital.
Two songs, including one of the bolded ones, might make you cry "Uncle".
One is on an album with "obscurity" in its title.
One song has lyrics that also discuss capri pants and book of the month club.
While all songs are in English, one is partly in la lingua del Los Angeles and another is both in gibberish and very proper English.
And, finally, there's a country song with an amount of money in it's title.
Hints, Take 2:
I've decided to just include the sources for the two songs for which complete lyrics were provided. See the comments for those.
Two of the answers (one bolded and one italicized) are from Broadway musicals. One of those was the originally performed by members of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union. The other one's main character might share a sentiment with Tevye, but he's been lumbered.
The three Scottish performers whose songs are included are Adam McNaughton, Andy M. Stewart, and Old Blind Dogs. McNaughton's song has been covered by Dick Gaughan and Mike Agrawal (in a somewhat Americanized version), while the Old Blind Dogs song is claimed to be related to "Streets of Laredo" and may date to the War of 1812.
One song was the flip side to a song about a TV character played by Jerry Mathers.
One singer eats cold pizza for breakfast, one notices who (or what) drinks pina coladas at Trader Vic's, and another went to Camp Granada.
One song title is the name of a former Asian leader.
And since I can't come up with fair but obscure clues for them, I'll reveal that the sources for the remaining songs are Pepe & the Bottle Blondes, Two Nice Girls, and Uncle Bonsai
Third and Final Hints:
It will no longer be possible to get points for the source, since that's the subject of these hints.
Asada - Brazzaville
compos mentis - Andy M. Stewart
G-man - Pins and Needles by Harold Rome
limestone - Old Blind Dogs
OD - Angel & the Reruns
polyethylene - Christine Lavin
queer - Two Nice Girls
rhubarb - Stop the World, I Want to Get Off by Anthony Newley and Leslie Bricusse
Savannah - Pepe & the Bottle Blondes
Thoreau - Allen Sherman
verandahs - Uncle Bonsai
Yorick - Adam McNaughton
I will post answers and final scores some time on Sunday night.
Anyway, there is a board game (and parlor game) called Encore, in which the object is to sing a portion of a song containing the challenge word. You have to include at least eight consecutive words for it to count. What makes this fun for the challenger (in this case, me) is to try to come up with words that aren't found in a lot of songs. To make it more challenging, you are supposed to do this from memory, not via google or your music collection.
I've come up with a bit of a scoring variation, as you will see, and have in mind actual physical prizes. (I hesitate to say "valuable prizes" as value is in the eye of the beholder.)
Rules: Use the comments to include your snippet of lyrics. I will award 1 point each for lyrics, name of song, and source (either performer or, in the case of lyrics from musicals, name of the musical). If you come up with a song other than the one I had in mind, I'll give a bonus point. I reserve the right to award other bonus points for any extraordinary cleverness I think deserves them.
None of the words are in the titles of the songs I have in mind. All of the songs are primarily in English. A few of these should be insanely easy, but a couple are pretty obscure. It might help if you know that I tried to mix things up by not using more than one song from any given source.
The game will run no longer than a week, at the end of which I will award prizes for first, second and third place. I also reserve the right to provide clues.
Words are bolded if nobody has gotten them. I will unbold them when there is a successful lyric and italicize when there are also successful guesses for song title and source. Strikethrough means that somebody has gotten the song I had in mind (and the song title and source).
Here is an a to z list of challenge words (including a few proper nouns) for your consideration:
Asada
compos mentis
G-man
limestone
OD
polyethylene
queer
rhubarb
savannah
Thoreau
Yorick
Hints, Take 1:
3 of the songs, including 2 of the bolded ones, are by singers from north of the Firth of Forth. Two are by people who would, if they were alive, be annoyed with the Dodgers this month.
One is by a group named after a city in Africa and another was written by somebody whose name includes a European capital.
Two songs, including one of the bolded ones, might make you cry "Uncle".
One is on an album with "obscurity" in its title.
One song has lyrics that also discuss capri pants and book of the month club.
While all songs are in English, one is partly in la lingua del Los Angeles and another is both in gibberish and very proper English.
And, finally, there's a country song with an amount of money in it's title.
Hints, Take 2:
I've decided to just include the sources for the two songs for which complete lyrics were provided. See the comments for those.
Two of the answers (one bolded and one italicized) are from Broadway musicals. One of those was the originally performed by members of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union. The other one's main character might share a sentiment with Tevye, but he's been lumbered.
The three Scottish performers whose songs are included are Adam McNaughton, Andy M. Stewart, and Old Blind Dogs. McNaughton's song has been covered by Dick Gaughan and Mike Agrawal (in a somewhat Americanized version), while the Old Blind Dogs song is claimed to be related to "Streets of Laredo" and may date to the War of 1812.
One song was the flip side to a song about a TV character played by Jerry Mathers.
One singer eats cold pizza for breakfast, one notices who (or what) drinks pina coladas at Trader Vic's, and another went to Camp Granada.
One song title is the name of a former Asian leader.
And since I can't come up with fair but obscure clues for them, I'll reveal that the sources for the remaining songs are Pepe & the Bottle Blondes, Two Nice Girls, and Uncle Bonsai
Third and Final Hints:
It will no longer be possible to get points for the source, since that's the subject of these hints.
Asada - Brazzaville
compos mentis - Andy M. Stewart
G-man - Pins and Needles by Harold Rome
limestone - Old Blind Dogs
OD - Angel & the Reruns
polyethylene - Christine Lavin
queer - Two Nice Girls
rhubarb - Stop the World, I Want to Get Off by Anthony Newley and Leslie Bricusse
Savannah - Pepe & the Bottle Blondes
Thoreau - Allen Sherman
verandahs - Uncle Bonsai
Yorick - Adam McNaughton
I will post answers and final scores some time on Sunday night.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-12 02:08 pm (UTC)I got a Nikon camera/I like to take a photograph (Kodakchrome, Simon & Garfunkel)
I'm livin' in my own Private Idaho, livin' in my own Private Idaho (Private Idaho, B52s)
It starts out like an A word, as anyone can see, but somewhere in the middle it gets awful queer to me (ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ, Big Bird)
... only slightly shocked that I'd defrocked a priest (You Can Always Count on Me, City of Angels)
Now the Leafs call me up to drive the Zamboni! (King of Spain, Moxy Fruvous)
Thanks,
-V.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-12 02:24 pm (UTC)And a little Madonna:
"I feel like a tooth being drilled, a nerve being drilled by a dentist, cause I'm non campos mentis."
And I know "polyethelene" is in that song about the couple who has bad sex but I can't remember the lyrics right now!
I don't know if I would count it but...
Date: 2008-10-12 02:52 pm (UTC)Oh, and I just managed to cudgel my brains enough to remember the line from Eddie from Ohio's “Eddie's Concubine” and realized that it's Jennie Craig, not Weight Watchers. Feh.
Thanks again,
-V.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-12 02:56 pm (UTC)You get 4 points each for Idaho and queer as I had other songs in mind. (I should have, however, remembered the B-52s).
And 3 points each for defrocked and Zamboni.
So Vardibidian takes an early lead with 17 points!
no subject
Date: 2008-10-12 03:00 pm (UTC)You are on the right track for polyethylene too, so keep digging through your memory.
And you get 3 points for compos mentis as I had quite a different song in mind.
So far, 4 points for Piefesser.
Re: I don't know if I would count it but...
Date: 2008-10-12 03:03 pm (UTC)I also had a different song in mind for Weight Watchers, so you get 4 points for that.
So, let's see, another 6 points and that makes it 23 for Vardibidian.
Re: I don't know if I would count it but...
Date: 2008-10-12 03:14 pm (UTC)So actually, Vardibidian is at 19. Which is still a nice early lead. But, hey, I figure Shmuel is probably not even awake yet :)
no subject
Date: 2008-10-12 04:21 pm (UTC)Here's one: "Bloody Mary's chewin' betel nuts/ and she don't use Pepsodent (spelling??)" from Rogers and Hamerstein's South Pacific. The song's probably called "Bloody Mary," but I'm not sure.
There's The Beatles song that has the line "the girl with kaleidoscope eyes" which is probably obvious, but I can't remember the rest of the lyrics...And which song is it..."Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds"?
Wow...the rest are surprisingly difficult...Fun game, though!
Woot!
Date: 2008-10-12 05:00 pm (UTC)"The girl with kaleidoscope eyes / Lucy in the sky with diamonds" from "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds," by the Beatles.
"He found his aroma lacked a certain appeal / He could clear the savannah after every meal" from "Hakuna Matata," from The Lion King, (and by Elton John, I think.)
And I may be mondegreening this one, but "...and Thoreau / I say, 'My name is T-Bone!' / And a hound dog digs a hole" from "Existential Blues," by T-Bone Stankus.
(Alternately, there's "Hard Hearted Hannah, the tramp of Savannah, GA." Title is "Hard Hearted Hannah," I don't recall the artist.)
I'm fairly sure I know which song you have in mind for Yorick, but I don't actually know any of the lyrics. :-)
Re: Woot!
Date: 2008-10-12 05:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-12 05:07 pm (UTC)"...in Boise, Idaho / That's how this business goes" from "W*O*L*D" by Harry Chapin.
Masticating
Date: 2008-10-12 07:35 pm (UTC)Thanks,
-V.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-12 08:35 pm (UTC)I'll give you only 2 for Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds since you only had 5 words, not the requisite 8.
So lepusdomesticus is on the board with 5 points.
Re: Woot!
Date: 2008-10-12 08:46 pm (UTC)Also, 3 points for "Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds," which was another one I figured as a gimme.
I'll give you 4 points for Thoreau, especially since I had to look up the lyrics to the song you cited, which I admit to not knowing the words to. (I vaguely remember the song from Dr. Demento shows of years past, but hadn't thought of it for years.) I actually thought you might know the one I had in mind.
4 points for the Lion King reference to savannah, also. I'll grant you only another 2 for "Hard Hearted Hannah" since she is correctly a vamp and not a tramp and I can't be generous when somebody forgets that Ella Fitzgerald made a song famous.
And, yes, you are on the right track for Yorick.
So 12 points for Shmuel.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-12 08:48 pm (UTC)And 4 points for Idaho which is, apparently a more popular state than I thought.
So, Shmuel takes the lead with 21 points.
Re: Masticating
Date: 2008-10-12 08:58 pm (UTC)That gives you another 4 and you retake the lead with 23 points.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-12 08:58 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-12 09:13 pm (UTC)By the way, I still owe you the prize for the "rabid fox" pangram. You were moving at the time, so I was waiting for your new address and then life got (more) hectic.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-13 01:26 am (UTC)"Yesterday he purred and played in his pussy paradise, decapitating tweety birds and masticating mice" - Nobody's Moggy Now, Eric Bogle.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-13 02:01 am (UTC)He's tied for first now at 23 points.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-13 02:04 am (UTC)I thought of using something from another Fred Small song (maybe "If I Were a Moose") but I needed an "I."
And I figured you would get masticating since we've discussed Eric Bogle.
So 6 points for Cellio.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-13 03:20 am (UTC)Hey, do you happen to have any of the obscure Bogle in digital format? Several of his albums never made it to CD and the tracks aren't even available via the common channels. Before I burn from the vinyl I figured I'd ask.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-13 03:43 am (UTC)Thanks! :-)
no subject
Date: 2008-10-13 09:09 am (UTC)Voices in the Wilderness
Plain and Simple (which has "Bloody Rotten Audience" on it, a personal favorite)
Endangered Species
and also The eric Bogle Songbook, which is kind of a greatest hits.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-13 12:44 pm (UTC)Thanks for the list. Albums that made it to CD seem to be available, albeit sometimes only on the used market and some are bloody expensive. Others never made it, like Pure and When the Wind Blows, and there are some songs from those albums that seem to be permanently out of print. For those I'm going to have to digitize the vinyl, it looks like. So I figured I'd ask in case you were ahead of me. :-)
no subject
Date: 2008-10-13 04:30 pm (UTC)I've also learned that without Google, I don't know a damned thing.
Polyethylene Pam - does that count?
Date: 2008-10-13 11:16 pm (UTC)"Polyethylene Pam"" by The Beatles
2) Weight Watchers
"(a song for the) RolyPoly People" by Judy Small
line:
"They tell us we're unhealthy while they get wealthy,
Weight Watchers is owned by Heinz..."
3) Xerox
"White Collar Hollar" bty Stan Rogers
"...on the Xerox line."
Re: Polyethylene Pam - does that count?
Date: 2008-10-13 11:37 pm (UTC)3 points for Weight Watchers.
And I will grant you 3 for Xerox, despite not having quite enough words, because I believe you know the song. I'll still give somebody else a chance to score with more of it.
That gives you a respectable 8 points for now.
Also, Groot gets 4 points for the following guess for paging me with A thousand what?" I quipped. "G-men, girls, guns, guts." (Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band, 'Big shot" even though I used the singular G-man.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-13 11:49 pm (UTC)Re: Polyethylene Pam - does that count?
Date: 2008-10-14 12:22 am (UTC)"Say, boys, can you code it? (field hand type UNH!)
Right on time
Nothin' ever happens in this life of mine,
I been haulin' out the data on the Xerox line."
Re: Polyethylene Pam - does that count?
Date: 2008-10-14 12:33 am (UTC)By the way, while Stan Rogers recorded it (so is a legit source), the song was actually written by Nigel Russell.
Is 9 points enough or are you going to beg me for more?
Re: Polyethylene Pam - does that count?
Date: 2008-10-14 12:38 am (UTC)But I will try to win more in one of the other fields of this quiz
Re: Woot!
Date: 2008-10-14 03:03 am (UTC)Then there were 2 in his email (without lyrics) so I have apparently cheated him of 6 points total and he should be at 29. I can only blame the annual baseball postseason stupor of sleep deprivation and frustration.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-15 03:02 am (UTC)(Sorry, would have posted this earlier but I mis-read your code and thought bold meant someone was already working on it.)
no subject
Date: 2008-10-15 03:08 am (UTC)It was written by Steve Goodman, who is probably most famous for "City of New Orleans". I'm actually especially fond of "A Dying Cubs Fan's Last Request" which is why I used the baseball hint. (Which could apply to another dead singer/songwriter from Chicago, too.)
no subject
Date: 2008-10-15 03:08 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-16 03:20 am (UTC)"Now I only toss one tassel, so I entertain at Elderhostel" is from the song "In Loving Mammary" by Uncle Ruthie Buell. Uncle Ruthie is best known for her children's music show on the radio on Los Angeles, but she did one adult CD (The Memory of Time) whih includes this song about mastectomy, the chorus of which is "Veh is mir, woe is me, little pink jug how I miss thee."
And the Stephen Sondheim lyric "And please don't fart, there's very little air and this is art" is titled "Invocation and Instructions to the Audience". It was originally written for A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum but was later used in The Frogs, a musical that was performed in the Yale University swimming pool.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-16 07:12 am (UTC)Ooh. I know the first and third of those people... I suspect this quiz is being kept alive by artificial means, but I don't know all the words. [wry smile]
no subject
Date: 2008-10-16 09:19 am (UTC)By the way, final set of hints will be tomorrow evening so people can have something to think about on the weekend :)
his hair was perfect
Date: 2008-10-16 06:26 pm (UTC)Thanks,
-V.
Re: his hair was perfect
Date: 2008-10-17 12:26 am (UTC)(And if anybody still doesn't grasp the hint, it's a reference to lyrics in 'Werewolves of London," one of my favorite songs of all time.
Re: his hair was perfect
Date: 2008-10-17 08:25 pm (UTC)Thanks,
-V.
Re: his hair was perfect
Date: 2008-10-18 01:36 am (UTC)I should have, however, remembered that there's a reference to rhubarb pie in Weird Al's "The Biggest Ball of Twine in Minnesota."
no subject
Date: 2008-10-18 05:33 pm (UTC)I don't remember the rest of the lyric that starts "I'd stick it in volvos or vacant verandahs..." but hey, that's 8!
Polyethelyne is still the sex toy song and I still can't remember any of the words.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-18 07:46 pm (UTC)The lyric is actually "I'd stick it in vacuums on vacant verandahs / in gas-guzzling Volvos and poodles and pandas."
The song title is actually "Penis Envy."
So, let's see, that puts you at 5 points.
no subject
Date: 2008-10-20 03:41 am (UTC)I hope everyone had fun with this. I may do it again in six months or so.