• Welcome to the Muppet Central Forum!
    You are viewing our forum as a guest. Join our free community to post topics and start private conversations. Please contact us if you need help.
  • Christmas Music
    Our 24th annual Christmas Music Merrython is underway on Muppet Central Radio. Listen to the best Muppet Christmas music of all-time through December 25.
  • Macy's Thanksgiving Parade
    Let us know your thoughts on the Sesame Street appearance at the annual Macy's Parade.
  • Jim Henson Idea Man
    Remember the life. Honor the legacy. Inspire your soul. The new Jim Henson documentary "Idea Man" is now streaming exclusively on Disney+.
  • Back to the Rock Season 2
    Fraggle Rock Back to the Rock Season 2 has premiered on AppleTV+. Watch the anticipated new season and let us know your thoughts.
  • Bear arrives on Disney+
    The beloved series has been off the air for the past 15 years. Now all four seasons are finally available for a whole new generation.
  • Sam and Friends Book
    Read our review of the long-awaited book, "Sam and Friends - The Story of Jim Henson's First Television Show" by Muppet Historian Craig Shemin.

The Song is Familiar...

D'Snowth

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 8, 2003
Messages
38,849
Reaction score
12,814
This thread is based on two things, 1. Huey Lewis suing Ray Parker, Jr. because he felt Parker's theme from Ghostbusters sounded too similar to his own "I Want a New Drug" and 2. We have a misheard lyrics thread, so why not a songs that sound similar to each other thread?

Aside from the whole "I Want a New Drug"/"Ghostbusters" thing, here's a couple of examples of what sounds similar to my ears...

- "Black & White" by Three Dog Night, and "The Tide is High" by Blondie. I always get those two mixed up if I can't tell right away which song I'm currently hearing... there's something about the "The child is black, the child is white" and "the tide is high" that sounds almost identical to me.

- "Frogs in the Glen" by Kermit, and Miss U's respective letter song from the Letter People. "Frogs in the Glen" obviously has a Scotish-vibe to it: the bagpipe flourish and such, but if you listen to "I'm little Miss U with my umbrella face", while it doesn't have bagpipes, it kind of has a bit of a Scotish vibe to it as well, and to me, it reminds me of "Frogs in the Glen" whenever I hear it.
 

Kiki

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 20, 2006
Messages
3,480
Reaction score
30
Here's a /really/ obvious one, but the start of "Under Pressure" by Queen (w/ David Bowie) and the start of Ice Ice Baby" by... a band... haven't got a clue... sound alike.
 

Son of Enik

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 28, 2006
Messages
371
Reaction score
11
When I was a kid, I always thought that the chorus of "Minute by Minute" by The Doobie Brothers was just them scat singing (Doo-ba-doo, ba-doo, ba-doo) Until I realized that they were rapidly singing the title, funny huh?
 

D'Snowth

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 8, 2003
Messages
38,849
Reaction score
12,814
John "Cougar" Mellencamp's "Jack and Diane", and Tracey Chapman's "Fast Car". Listen to them back-to-back.
 

Davina

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 10, 2003
Messages
844
Reaction score
9
Here's a /really/ obvious one, but the start of "Under Pressure" by Queen (w/ David Bowie) and the start of Ice Ice Baby" by... a band... haven't got a clue... sound alike.
that would be by Vanilla Ice (ice baby..)

and yes, those too are identical.. i don't care that VI swears there is like a one note or half beat difference.. (no, there isn't.. not to the ear anyway....)
 

D'Snowth

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 8, 2003
Messages
38,849
Reaction score
12,814
Before I could tell the difference, sometimes I wouldn't be sure as to whether I was hearing the opening strands of "Sweet Dreams (Are Made of This)" by Eurhymics or "Sunglasses at Night" by Corey Hart.
 

ryhoyarbie

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 2, 2002
Messages
3,565
Reaction score
122
Here's a /really/ obvious one, but the start of "Under Pressure" by Queen (w/ David Bowie) and the start of Ice Ice Baby" by... a band... haven't got a clue... sound alike.
Vanilla Ice did not count his song "Ice, Ice, Baby" to be that big of a hit or even doing anything at all. But once it got big, David Bowie and the former members of Queen took notice of the song and sued, like any other person would do.
 

Davina

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 10, 2003
Messages
844
Reaction score
9
heh.. only real hit he had.. the TMNT song really doesn't count :smile:
 

Drtooth

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 16, 2002
Messages
31,717
Reaction score
6,710
Vanilla Ice did not count his song "Ice, Ice, Baby" to be that big of a hit or even doing anything at all. But once it got big, David Bowie and the former members of Queen took notice of the song and sued, like any other person would do.
That was a case of unauthorized sampling. We all know what sampling is in Rap music... but we all know that most rap/hip hop artists have the intelligence of a corn muffin to ASK permission first. Sort of like how Weird Al asks permission to do parodies of his stuff. if he gets turned down, he can always alter the melody himself... case in point, "Buckingham Blues" which was salvaged from another one he had in mind that Melloncamp wouldn't give him the rights to. The first line should be a dead give-a-way. of course, he can always find another song that fits... Beverly Hillbillies was originally a Prince song, but Prince was uptight about it, so it was altered.

Same with rap. A LOT of it borrows music from others for the rhythm line, but they have to ask permission to use that music.


That said, how about when the SAME artists wind up plagerizing themselves inadvertently? Examples?

"Somewhere that's Green" from Little Shop of Horrors and "Part of your World" from the Little Mermaid... Alan Menkin, right? Especially the ending crescendos of the songs... same tune... same timing.

And then of course Sesame Street's own Jeff Moss who liked Little Jerry's "Sad" so much he accidentally made "Four" and MTM's "I'm always gonna love you" with similar 1950's Doo Wop melodies.
 

Gelfling Girl

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 16, 2009
Messages
2,463
Reaction score
59
Not really so much songs as singers, but...

My mom just told me a week or two ago that she used to mix up Phil Collins and Elton John, although frankly I just don't see (hear?) it, other than the fact that they're both British (which I didn't know about either until rather recently :embarrassed:) and they both did songs for Disney movies. Of course, I tend to mix up Elton with another piano player who just happened to voice a Disney character. (Let's see if anyone could figure out who I'm referring to.)
 
Top