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free download music i'm a foodie by lcshow One more step. Please complete the security check to access www.broadwayworld.com. Why do I have to complete a CAPTCHA? Completing the CAPTCHA proves you are a human and gives you temporary access to the web property. What can I do to prevent this in the future? If you are on a personal connection, like at home, you can run an anti-virus scan on your device to make sure it is not infected with malware. If you are at an office or shared network, you can ask the network administrator to run a scan across the network looking for misconfigured or infected devices. Another way to prevent getting this page in the future is to use Privacy Pass. You may need to download version 2.0 now from the Chrome Web Store. Cloudflare Ray ID: 67e1ee926a7f1691 • Your IP : 188.246.226.140 • Performance & security by Cloudflare. The 10 best songs about food, as chosen by Animal House. Aussie rockers Animal House choose the best food and drink-themed songs, because their new single is called Coca Cola. Geddit? Here at TeamRock, there are few things we love as much as music and food. And what could be better than the two of those things combined? Exactly. Nothing. So, when a new single from Aussie garage-rockers Animal House entitled Coca Cola landed in our inboxes, it seemed a fortuitous – if admittedly tenuous – opportunity to get them to throw a little list together for us… Or maybe we were just really hungry that day. So, without further ado, Animal House’s list of the finest food and drink-themed anthems of our time – including some full , because they’re punks and they do as they please, damn it – is below. You can also watch the video for the band’s raucous single, Coca Cola , at the end of the page. Limp Bizkit – Chocolate Starfish And The Hotdog Flavored Water. “Limp Bizkit are a staple of my teenage-hood. Their lyrics and riffs could possibly only be matched by Offspring. God they’re awful, aren’t they? Favourite lyrics: ‘ If I say fuck, two more times, that’s 36 fucks in this fucked up rhyme ’. That’s poetry.” – The Teaches Of Peaches. “I actually only started getting into Peaches recently and she’s an absolute ball. Just unashamedly vulgar lyrics and production finesse that always seems to hit the spot. Anyone who has a reputation for getting people to shake their clothes off at a gigs has to be brilliant.” Kelis – Milkshake. “An absolute classic, will go down into the history books this one. I’m always reminded of the Family Guy scene where Peter Griffin is forced by the other prisoners to push his boobs together and sing ‘My milkshake brings all the boys to the yard’ with his pants down.” Marvin Gaye – Grapevine. “Classic wine reference. Marvin Gaye has one of the most soulful voices in pop. I’m a huge fan of that whole Motown movement in general. It’s paved the way for pretty much every pop song ever written since.” – Meat Is Murder. “Delicious tasty murder… I’ve enjoyed The Smiths for years but only realised how important they were once descending upon as my new home. Johnny Marr is undeniably an absolute genius and their short-lived partnership was insanely fruitful.” Fat White Family - Champagne Holocaust. “Champagne is an essential food group for the elite. Fat White Family are the recent spearhead representing basically anyone who is not rich, but particularly the poorer and working classes. They are an essential band and put on a disgustingly beautiful live show.” Supertramp – Breakfast In America. “The most important meal of the day: Supertramp. SO MANY BANGERS in this brekkie. Amazing songwriting and important messages galore. The Logical Song , famously and proudly remixed by Scooter in his Stadium Techno Experience, so much hilarity.” 50 Cent – Candy Shop. “I don’t think any joke was more ironic than when 50 Cent was declared bankrupt. I mean, it is obviously bullshit and a brilliant PR stunt, but still. I’d let him take me to the candy shop. The dude has a video game about his life, for God’s sake.” . “Just another 60s banger by a bunch of producers who invented a band called The Strangeloves and pretended they were sheep farmers. Weird idea but it obviously worked.” Mac Demarco – Salad Days. “If this was a person, you would make friends with Salad Days . So lovely, enchanting and chilled, this album is great for any occasion where you just want to relax. That’s a bloody good friend if you ask me!” Animal House’s new EP, Hot Bodies, is available now. Check out the video to new single Coca Cola below. Free download music i'm a foodie by lcshow. 531 Songs About Food: "Food Glorious Food" ("Oliver!") "Be Our Guest"- ("Beauty & the Beast") "Maximum Consumpion" -The Kinks "animal crackers" - Shirley Temple "Bread & butter"- The Newbeats "Food" - The Turtles "Eat It"- "Weird"Al Yankovic "Ito Eats"- Elvis Presley "goober peas"- Kingston Trio "happy meal"- The Cardigans "Savoy Truffle" -The Beatles "Let's Call The Whole Thing Off" -The Gershwins "RC COLa & a moon pie" -NRBQ "Let Me Teach How to Eat"-Rev. Horton Heat. " I like F ood" -Descendents "Fast Food" Stevens & Grdnic "Fast Food"- Richard Thompson "Food For Songs" Del Amitri "Junkfood junkie"- Larry Groce "Junk Food"- Patty Larkin "Snack Attack" Godley & Creme "Life In The Foodchain"- Tonio K �Bigsmorgasbordwunderwerks� - Squonk "He Ate too many jelly donuts"- Rick Dees "Peter Percival Patterson's Pet Pig Porky"- The Monkees "Gonzo Freddy's Fast Food Feeding Frenzy"- Paisley Brain Cells "Howard Johnson's Got His Mojo Working"- NRBQ "Nighthawks at the Diner"- Tom Waits "Smokey Joe's Cafe"- The Robins "Alice's Restaurant"- Arlo Guthrie " "Tavern On The Green"- Chic "Scenes From An Italian Restaurant"- Billy Joel "Rosalie's Good Eats Cafe"-Bobby Bare " Sleeping On The Roof of a Mexican Restaurant"- Prote!n "The House Of Blue Lights"- Freddie Slack & Ella Mae Morse "Eat The Menu"- Sugarcubes "TV Dinners"- ZZ Top "Supper Time"- Irving "Suppertime"- YOU'RE A GOOD MAN, CHARLIE BROWN "Sing for Your Supper" - THE BOYS FROM SYRACUSE "Sing for Your Supper"- Mamas & Papas �Supper�s Ready� - Genesis "Butter The Soul"- Cornershop "Butter"- Megan McDonough "Soul Food"- Lynn Tait & The Jets "Beans & cornBread" - Louis Jordan "Solid Potato Salad"- Ella Mae Morse "Hot PotatoES" The Kinks "Mashed Potato"- Dee Dee Sharp �Mashed Potato, USA� - James Brown "Mashed Potatoes"- American Rag "A Small Potato's Mind"- Husking Bee "Potato"- Cheryl Wheeler "Lil' Potato"-Metamora "Peelin� Taters"- Junior Brown "Sweet 'Tater Pie" -Mongo Santamaria "Sweet Potato Pie"- James Taylor Cold Budweiser and A Sweet Tater - Joe Diffy "Meat & Potato Man"- Alan Jackson "All that Meat & No Potatoes" -Fats Waller. "Chocolate" -Lisa Hall "Chocolate Cake"- Crowded House "I Wanna Eat Choco Bars"- Shonen Knife "Chocolate Salty Balls"- Chef (South Park) �Chocolate and Cheese� - Ween "Hot Chocolate"- Shonen Knife "The Chocolate Soldier" - Oscar Straus "The Land of Chocolate"- Death by Chocolate "Chocolate Jesus"- Tom Waits "raspberries,strawberries" -The Kingston Trio "riffin' the scotch"- Billie Holiday "Bread And Butter Woman" - Danny Kaye & The Andrews Sisters "Shoe Fly Pie And Apple Pan Dowdy" - Guy Lombardo "Eep, Ipe, Wanna Piece of Pie"- Fats Waller "Strawberry Fields Forever"- The Beatles "Cream Puff" - Johnny Nash "Sugar And Spice" - The Searchers/Cryan Shames "A Rose And A Candy Bar" - The Johnson Brothers "A Rose & A Baby Ruth"- George Hamilton IV "Banana Split for My Baby" - Louis Prima "Candy Store Blues"- Maria Muldaur "More Candy"- Richard Zimmerman Big Rock Candy Mountain" - Harry McClintock /Burl Ives "Egg Cream" - Lou Reed "Jumbo Malt"- Skatalites "Root Beer Rag" - Billy Joel "A Little Something Refreshing"- "Parade Of The Jelly Babies: - The Gollywogs "Someone's Pinched My Winkles" - Rolf Harris "Marshmallow World" - Darlene Love "Jelly Jungle Of Orange Marmalade"- Monday Sinclair "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds"- The Beatles "My Boy Lollipop- Millie Small "Lollipop Train"- Pussycat Balance "Lollipop"- The Chordettes "Popsicle"- New Kids On The Block/Jan & Dean "Popsicles, Icicles"- The Murmaids "When You Come To The End Of A Lollipop" - Max Bygraves "Does Your Chewing Gum Lose It's Flavor. - Lonnie Donegan "white pepper ice cream" -Cibo Matto "Hors D'Oveuvre"- Martin Mull. Wow! That's a Lot of Songs! If You Have More Songs About Food: E-Mail Us! 268 Songs about Elvis. a l l m i x e d u p Monday Mornings from 10:00 AM WBAI 99.5 FM City. Thirty Years of Food in Music Videos. On MTV’s birthday, an appreciation of the coffee, cakes, candy, breakfast cereals and milkshakes of song. Thirty years ago this week, in 1981, MTV debuted on cable television, the first round-the-clock channel. The trivia question everyone seems to know is that the network’s first video was the Buggles’ aptly titled “Video Killed the Radio Star.” The first MTV video I saw—about a year later, when I was 11—was the Steve Miller Band’s “Abracadabra.” That may have been an even more appropriate introduction to the budding medium; the special effects were clunky, the fashions abominable, but there was magic in the way it transfixed me. For the next few years I was hooked, watching MTV whenever I had control of the remote (this was in the days when one TV per household was the norm). If my friend or I got to stay home sick from school, we would write down all the videos the other had missed that day, just to rub it in. Music videos have evolved creatively and technologically over the years and have touched on nearly every subject—including food. By my casual estimation, at least half of those uses of food fall into the “overt sexual metaphor” category. Let’s look at some notable video food moments: 1981: ’ “” The seventh video to ever air on MTV is an awkward yet strangely touching bit of storytelling. Lead singer Chrissie Hynde portrays a lonely waitress whose only customers—aside from someone passed out with his head on the table—are a trio of young guys, played by her bandmates. They order the special (campily pointing to it on the menu to coincide with the lyric “I’m special”), leer flirtatiously/menacingly at Hynde, then leave before so much as taking a sip of coffee once their bouncy girlfriends arrive. Hynde looks longingly out the window at them driving away, repeating, “I’m special. I gotta have some of your attention.” 1981: Altered Images, “Happy Birthday” This bubbly New Wave ditty showcases some fabulous 1980s fashion and waggly-limbed dancing, and features, naturally, a birthday party scene complete with a great big cake and what appear to be jello shots. 1982: Toto Coelho (known as Total Coelho in the U.S. to differentiate it from Toto), “I Eat Cannibals” A band of wild-eyed, garbage-bag- wearing women do quasi-tribal dance moves while singing about all the ways they like to eat cannibals (roasted, toasted, etc.). I’m not entirely sure there isn’t a sexual metaphor in here somewhere, but the video doesn’t dwell on it. In fact, there is no eating of cannibals, only an apple and a cupcake. 1982: The Waitresses, “I Know What Boys Like” Aside from the name of the band, the only food reference in this video is the opening shot of a cup of coffee on a checkered tablecloth, which is also used as an occasional background. But I love singer Patty Donahue’s classic wide belt, miniskirt and diamond-pattered top ensemble. And you’ll be hearing the song in your head for the rest of the day. 1982: , “I Want Candy” Lead singer Annabella Lwin introduced the world to the cornrow-hawk, while dancing around giant candy canes planted in the sand and seductively eating ice cream. Hint: the candy she’s talking about isn’t M&Ms and gumdrops. 1983: Donna Summer, “She Works Hard for the Money” Boy, does she. The star of the video (in this case, not the singer) starts the morning scrubbing floors, then slinging coffee and getting sexually harassed at her diner job. She finishes up her long day at a sweat shop before going home to her two bratty kids, who bang their utensils on the table to demand dinner. If only she hadn’t gotten knocked up, she seems to think, as she stares wistfully at an old photo of herself as a young dancer. At least Donna Summer, who looks at her creepily through the window, understands. You better treat her right. 1984: Weird Al Yankovic, “Eat It” The curly-haired, pencil-mustached video satirist had it so easy in the 1980s. Videos like Michael Jackson’s “Beat It,” featuring West Side Story-inspired dance rumbles, were easy targets. In this one, he turns the lyrics into an admonishment to a picky eater: “Don’t want no Cap’n Crunch, don’t want no Raisin Bran. Don’t you know that other kids are starving in Japan? Just eat it.” 1984: Ratt, “Round and Round” Here is an early example of the 1980s video trope (especially popular with heavy metal bands) that has snooty, rich or otherwise uptight people getting their comeuppance. In this case, a fancy dinner—guests include Milton Berle in both male and female roles —is disturbed by the noisy rocking of the band upstairs. All hell breaks loose, the guitarist falls through the roof onto the dinner table, and the butler takes the lid off the final course: a dish full of live rats. Get it? 1986: Peter Gabriel, “Sledgehammer” The innovative editing and animation techniques used in the British singer’s most popular music video earned it seven MTV video awards. In one sequence about “fruit cages,” various fruits swirl around Gabriel’s head, forming different shapes. I have no idea what fruit cages are, but he is apparently using them here as—surprise!—a sexual metaphor. 1990: Warrant, “Cherry Pie” If you ask me, this is when hair metal jumped the shark. “She’s my cherry pie”? Really , that’s the best you can come up with? The wedge of fruit pie falling into a model’s lap at the end? Subtle, guys. Real subtle. 1994: Weezer, “Buddy Holly” Finally, some good clean video food fun. It doesn’t get squeakier than Arnold’s, the drive-in from the 1970s TV series Happy Days , where, through the magic of editing, the video is set. Even Fonzie, the supposed Lothario of the show (who has a cameo in the video), never seemed to do more than “neck” with his many female admirers. 2003: Kelis, “Milkshake” This one, not so clean. Set in the world’s most oversexed diner, there’s plenty of shake drinking, but something tells me the lovely young singer isn’t bragging about her prowess at making ice cream treats when she says her “milkshake brings all the boys to the yard.” 2007: Fountains of Wayne, “Someone to Love” Eating solo in adjacent apartments, two star-crossed would-be lovers (one of them played by comedian Demitri Martin) never discover that their soulmate and dining partner could be right next door. 2010: featuring Snoop Dogg, “California Gurls” The recommended age on every pre-schooler’s favorite board game goes up a few decades in the pop singer’s version of Candy Land, where she lounges nude on cotton candy clouds and dons pastry lingerie. 13 tasty songs about food. The greatest hits of songs about snacks with possible food pairings. Everyone needs to eat. We don’t all need to listen to music, but we need food to stay alive. It’s a luxury to be able to have a choice in what we eat, and the opportunity to pay for or make delicious meals. We even have snacks, just for fun, when we can’t wait for our next meal. People are so proud of the food they eat, that they sometimes let others know that they are a “foodie”, a pretentious term for “I like to eat”. It’s a wonder there aren’t more songs about food. Many food-related songs sound goofy, or are under the music parody umbrella. Some artists know what is good for them though, and they champion food in song. Other times, they use food as a metaphor for something else. Usually, that has to do with sexy times. When you’re munching on a huge meatball sub, don’t you think it would be best paired with a song about sandwiches? That’s where this article comes into play. Inspired by The Avalanches’ Beatles-sampling, Biz Markie-chomping track “The Noisy Eater”, here are 13 tasty songs about snacks (with possible pairings). They are sure to make you hungry, or help you digest something delicious. J Dilla- “Last Donut of the Night” This track may be an instrumental, but the album is called Donuts because apparently J Dilla loved donuts so much. That is some snack dedication! The album even inspired the Dilla’s Delights donut shop in Detroit operated by Dilla’s uncle, Herman Hayes. “Last Donut of the Night” is a hazy, sleepy track, perfect for a sweet hole-y treat after a night out. There are many donuts around, but which would be the best snack after the club? It’s really up to you, as everybody has a personal favourite. Vanilla Dip with sprinkles is the ultimate party donut, and may be fitting for such a good jam. The People Under The Stairs – “Eat Street” A perfect track for hopping in the car and going for a drive-thru. This song may even help you make a decision as to where you want to go for lunch, as the PUTS fellows are listing off all of their favourite fast food joints. The beat is reminiscent of that super positive backpacker hip-hop, but the track just makes you want to get super fat from burgers and burritos. You’ll start to feel the meaty sweats just thinking about this track. “Eat Street” would be great paired with as much fast food as you can handle. Kelis – “Breakfast” “Hey guys, are you hungry? My mom made food!” is the first voice you hear on the opening track from Kelis’s album Food , by her son. Why, yes I am, thanks for asking! Many of the album’s track titles are about food. Songs like “Jerk Chicken” and “Friday Fish Fry” make you hungry for your next meal (even if they’re not really about food). Of course, breakfast is the most important meal of the day. It gets you moving and shaking, ready for the day. This is a nice song to get you pumped about the day ahead, just like a balanced breakfast will. The song is about Kelis’s relationship with her son, but the line “Maybe we’ll make it to breakfast” keeps with the food theme. Well Kelis, I hope you do too, because this track would be paired nicely with a classic breakfast of two eggs (sunny side up), toast, hash browns, and three pieces of bacon. Silver Jews – “Candy Jail” The most delicious sounding jail is described in this song. There is a lyric that says “the warden keeps the data on your favourite brands.” This does not seem like much of a jail at all. It could be that you are stuck in this prison made of candy, and you just won’t leave because you are getting what you want. It’s because you are dead, as the lyrics say “I came to visit your grave.” If you don’t focus on that part, you may as well visualize having a taste of those sweet peppermint jail bars, and your peanut brittle bunk bed. It’s a great song for those with a major sweet tooth. You might want to grab a few choice candy bars to munch on during this song. The Sugarcubes – “Eat the Menu” This song may be for the ultimate glutton. Bjork’s old band The Sugarcubes suggest you eat everything in sight, including the menu. Bjork yelps “your appetite is appalling” which is a kind of harsh thing to say. It’s a nice message, though. I’d rather hear this kind of stuff than to be told to diet, or to cut something else. Eating the TV doesn’t sound too appealing, though. This is a really goofy song, but you shouldn’t really expect anything less from The Sugarcubes. This track could be paired with anything. It could be your deepest, darkest food secrets. They don’t care! B.A. Johnston – “Pizza Party” There are many pizza songs around, mostly written by young punk bands. The kids love their pizza. That may be due to a lack of experience with living the hard life. However, B.A. Johnston ups the ante on the pizza song by singing a short tune about eating pizza along in the dark. Avoiding the shame you would get by chomping down on a big, greasy hot-and-ready from Little Caesar’s, or whatever chain you are embarrassed about. Let those pepperonis slide down your chin, but make sure to pick them back up. You don’t want to miss a perfectly delicious meat! This song is obviously great when paired with your favourite slice. Personal and The Pizzas – “I Don’t Wanna Be No Personal Pizza” This band’s whole shtick is writing songs pizza and being local toughs from New Jersey. Their name says it all. Tracks like “Pepperoni Eyes” and “Pizza Army” keep the pizza theme chugging along. Even the accent of the singer, Personal, sounds like a super thick “Ayyy I’m walkin’ here.” You wouldn’t mind sharing a big pie with these guys. They sound like they know their way around a pizza, and could point out the best place to stuff your gut. Another song to pair with a cheesy, New York-style pepperoni pie. Beastie Boys – “Egg Man” Eggs are a food not only for eating, but for causing havoc by unruly teens. This track is all about the latter: throwing eggs at people. There is a lyric about Humpty Dumpty being a “big fat egg” (harsh!), and the age-old question about what came first – the chicken or the egg? I doubt many people ask existential questions while they are throwing an egg at a big bald head. It’s kind of a waste of a great breakfast, but youths are very wasteful creatures, and don’t know their way around a good Benedict. This track does rule, and Paul’s Boutique is one of the greatest albums ever. Blondie – “Eat to the Beat” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eq5TtEzbFIY. Here’s a high-energy song to keep those calories at bay while you’re dancing. “Eat to the Beat” is a great track, not only because it is super fast, no-nonsense rock ‘n’ roll, but it encourages you to dance around while sliding a piping hot pie down your throat! Eating to the beat is actually a little trickier than it sounds, and it really isn’t that fun, either. is cool though, so give it a try if you want! There is no judgment here, although if you are snackin’, you should also be dancin’. This song would be great when paired with something that wouldn’t be too dangerous to eat while you are tippi tippi tippi tapping on the dance floor. Don’t choke! Deltron 3030 – “The Future of Food” The title of this track is quite literal. Famous chef gentleman David Chang describes the food in the year 3030, and it’s pretty funny. It’s just Chang talking over some futuristic beats with laser sounds, describing how you could press a button on a machine to get any kind of food you want. It sounds pretty incredible, but Chang says that the customers only want to eat beet salads and pork buns. This is a short track, but do you have some sort of fusion dish by your side? This would go well with some weird fusion thing. Beck – “Satan Gave Me a Taco” Unfortunately, the taco Beck received from Satan was very bad, and made him sick. Nothing about this taco Beck is talking about sounds appetizing. The experience sounds very unpleasant. Why would Beck take a taco from Satan in the first place? As the song progresses, the world around him sounds like a vile, depressing place. Could it be that this is the only food acceptable in this world? The song becomes very meta, and comes around full circle. There really is no way to understand why Beck would take a taco from Satan, though. There aren’t many songs about disgusting food, so good on Beck for making a gross song about an otherwise delicious food. Pair this track with a taco you actually enjoy. I wouldn’t want anybody to feel bad about their food choice. Kyary Pamyu Pamyu – “Candy Candy” If you are looking to blast through space and time with the ultimate sugar rush, this song on its own will do the trick. The blown-out excitement and cheerfulness of “Candy Candy” by Kyary Pamyu Pamyu is a real treat for your ears, and will make you want to devour some sweet treats in no time. This song was #1 on the Japanese billboard charts in 2012, so it’s a nice thought that everyone was munching on their favourite candy treat while listening to this ultra-positive snacking tune. The snack gods salute you, Kyary Pamyu Pamyu. This song would obviously be paired with your favourite candy, but make sure it is super sweet and extremely colourful. The Avalanches – “The Noisy Eater” “I’m Hungry! I want something to eat!” exclaims Biz Markie at the beginning of this great goof-around on the latest, long-awaited Avalanches release. It’s a great track about being hungry, slopping back a ton of food, noisily crunching away, all day long. It goes through breakfast and lunch. A whole day of chomping back meals, slurping up stuff, and smacking your lips. The crunching and munching sound effects are silly, reminiscent of getting a really amazing meal, and eating it too fast because it tastes so good. Sometimes your belly is large and in charge, and you have to let it do the work for you. This is a wonderful song to pair with your breakfast bowl of Lucky Charms (marshmallows only). We can’t embed it yet, so check out Biz Markie’s classic commercial instead. BONUS: “Weird Al” Yankovic – The Food Album. There are so many parody songs Weird Al has made about food, he just compiled them onto an album for everyone to enjoy. It’s probably one of the best compilations ever released. With songs like “Lasagna”, “Eat It”, “My Balogna” and “Addicted to Spuds”, it almost feels like a greatest hits of songs and food. Weird Al knows how to win the hearts of music and food lovers everywhere. The album almost pushes the boundaries of parody, and makes its way into an appreciation of the food Al is singing about. Yes Al, I love Rocky Road as well! This whole album pairs well with eating as much food as you can.