![Birthday Song For Cute Baby Birthday Song For Cute Baby](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/z9v2d7RW5Ts/maxresdefault.jpg)
Every month a new meme seems to surface on the Internet, but there are those that started the trend and will forever be a classic. They’re the type of memes that you can show to anyone, and they’ll always know what it’s about, unlike some of the newer ones where it can get hard to keep up, and they need explaining.
It’s been a long road for memes, but do you remember the ones that started it all? Here are five of the best memes of all time, not just of the month.
It’s been a long road for memes, but do you remember the ones that started it all? Here are five of the best memes of all time, not just of the month.
Funny Happy Birthday Song - Cute Teddy Sings Very Funny Song. BEST HAPPY BIRTHDAY SONG| Funny Bird Singing Birthday Song. 4 years ago 547K views. BEST HAPPY BIRTHDAY SONG. BEST HAPPY BIRTHDAY SONG| Funny Bird Singing Birthday Song. Planning the first birthday is a special event. To capture the memories that have flown by, share some milestone pictures in a unique 1st birthday slideshow. Check out this listing of good songs for 1st birthday slideshow.
The Rickroll
Starting off with the OG, the Rickroll is a “bait-and-switch” meme that became popular by people providing a link to something that is supposed to be relevant to what you’re discussing, but instead leads to a music video of Rick Astley’s 80’s hit “Never Gonna Give You Up.” People got even more clever and began to embed the video in other videos, playing after the person started watching the video that was supposed to be something completely different.
Trollface
Probably the thing that first comes to mind when thinking about memes is the iconic Trollface that gained popularity through Redditors and rage comics, which are those short comics using characters that you’ve probably seen before, such as the “TROLOLOLOL” face and the “Derp” face. It’s an image of drawing of a face that looks like it’s about to let out the most condescending, tear-inducing laughter.
Double Rainbow
A tender moment in the history of YouTube was back in 2010 when this video of a man recording a double rainbow near Yosemite National Park surfaced and spread like wildfire. People went crazy over this video due to the fact that the guy filming behind the camera was freaking out at the sight of a double rainbow, to the point of him bursting in tears. An iconic line from the video is the guy, named “Bear,” yelling out “What does it mean?!?!” The video was unnoticed for many months, up until Jimmy Kimmel featured it on his show. The video was later featured in a Microsoft commercial advertising the Windows Live Photo Gallery.
Doge
No one calls dogs “dogs” on the Internet anymore – they’re doges.
This meme started from a picture of the original doge; a golden Shiba Inus. The doge was in a side-eyed position, and was often accompanied by white text or captions saying things like “wow,” “much [adjective],” or “very [noun].” The reason they were typed this way was to resemble the simple thought process of dogs, or should I say, doges.
This meme started from a picture of the original doge; a golden Shiba Inus. The doge was in a side-eyed position, and was often accompanied by white text or captions saying things like “wow,” “much [adjective],” or “very [noun].” The reason they were typed this way was to resemble the simple thought process of dogs, or should I say, doges.
Bad Luck Brian
Everyone and their mother has seen this meme; you know the one – the bad school yearbook photo of a blonde, red-faced kid with a huge, brace-face smile in a plaid sweater vest. I know that’s really descriptive, but now that I’ve said it you know what I’m talking about, right?
Bad Luck Brian took over the Internet with its captions depicting embarrassing, tragic, or just plain unlucky situations. For example, people would type things like “Trying to stealthily fart in class,” followed by “Shits.” There are many combinations possible of unlucky situations that makes this meme so funny.
Bad Luck Brian took over the Internet with its captions depicting embarrassing, tragic, or just plain unlucky situations. For example, people would type things like “Trying to stealthily fart in class,” followed by “Shits.” There are many combinations possible of unlucky situations that makes this meme so funny.
'Happy, Happy Birthday Baby' | |
---|---|
Single by The Tune Weavers | |
B-side | 'Ol' Man River' |
Released | July 1957 |
Format | 7' |
Recorded | 1957 |
Length | 2:22 |
Label | Casa Grande (Boston, Massachusetts) Checker (rest of the United States) |
Songwriter(s) | Margo Sylvia, Gilbert Lopez |
![Birthday Song For Cute Baby Birthday Song For Cute Baby](/uploads/1/2/5/7/125727851/268257840.jpg)
'Happy, Happy Birthday Baby' | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by Ronnie Milsap | ||||
from the album Lost in the Fifties Tonight | ||||
B-side | 'I'll Take Care of You' | |||
Released | March 8, 1986 | |||
Genre | Country | |||
Length | 3:39 | |||
Label | RCA Victor | |||
Songwriter(s) | Margo Sylvia, Gilbert Lopez | |||
Producer(s) | Ronnie Milsap, Rob Galbraith, Tom Collins | |||
Ronnie Milsap singles chronology | ||||
|
'Happy, Happy Birthday Baby' is a 1957 song written by Margo Sylvia & Gilbert Lopez. 'Happy, Happy Birthday Baby' was originally performed by The Tune Weavers, who had their only hit with this song. Both Margo Sylvia and Gilbert Lopez were members of The Tune Weavers. The single went to number four on the R&B chart and went to number five on the Hot 100.[1] The B-side of 'Happy, Happy Birthday Baby, was The Tune Weavers version of 'Ol' Man River'
The inspiration for the song came from Margo's then-boyfriend, Donald Clements, who was a member of a group called the Sophomores. When he broke up with her, Margo came up with the lyrics to express how she wanted to stay with him. 'The words came so easily. It was real,' she recounted to Wayne Jancik in The Billboard Book of One-Hit Wonders. Margo and the rest of the Tune Weavers recorded it and 'Ol' Man River' in an 18-hour session on March 7, 1957, in Boston, with Margo eight months pregnant. Seven months later, the song reached its peak of popularity in the United States.[2]
Based on the similarities in melody, 'Happy, Happy Birthday Baby' appears to have inspired two future Top 20 hits. 'I'm On The Outside (Looking In)' by Little Anthony and the Imperials (#15 1964) appears inspired by the main tune of this song, and 'Wasted Days and Wasted Nights' by Freddy Fender (#8 1975) appears inspired by the chorus of this song.
The track was originally released on the Casa Grande label. It was later re-released on the Checker label, but this later version omitted the final four saxophone notes (at the coda) which were part of the song's signature.
In 1988, Margo Sylvia recorded a Christmas version of the song called Merry Merry Christmas Baby for classic Records. It was included on the Ultimate Christmas Album by Collectables Records.
Cover versions[edit]
- Dolly Parton covered the song in 1966, and it became her first charting single, though it peaked at only #8 on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 chart; in 1982, a duet recording of the song was included on the album The Winning Hand, featuring Parton and Willie Nelson (though the recording featured Parton's original 1966 vocals, with new vocals from Nelson edited in to create a 'duet').
- Sandy Posey hit #36 on the country charts with a remake in 1971.
- In 1986, Ronnie Milsap had his twenty-eighth number one on the country chart with his version of the song.[3]
- Wanda Jackson performed the song for her 1958 eponymous debut album. In 1960, it was released as a single but did not chart.
- Rosie & the Originals released a previously unreleased version on their 2000 album The Best of Rosie & the Originals.[4]
- Elvis Presley's private recording of the song, at a home in Waco, Texas, in May of 1958, can be found in some albums, including Elvis' listening and 'rehearsels' getting ready to sing Happy, Happy Birthday Baby himself. (Off Duty With Privat Presley) (Private Home Recordings - Eddie Fadal Residence, Waco Texas - May 1958)
Chart performance[edit]
Chart (1986) | Peak position |
---|---|
US Hot Country Songs (Billboard)[5] | 1 |
Canadian RPM Country Tracks | 1 |
In other media[edit]
- The song replaced '16 Candles' in the 1997 reissue of the 1972 film 'Pink Flamingos.'
References[edit]
- ^Whitburn, Joel (2004). Top R&B/Hip-Hop Singles: 1942-2004. Record Research. p. 592.
- ^Wayne Jancik, The Billboard Book of One-Hit Wonders, expanded first edition (Billboard Books, 1998) ISBN0-8230-7622-9, pp. 40.
- ^Whitburn, Joel (2004). The Billboard Book Of Top 40 Country Hits: 1944-2006, Second edition. Record Research. p. 233.
- ^'Rosie & The Originals - The Best Of (CD)'. Discogs.com. Retrieved 2016-08-29.
- ^'Ronnie Milsap Chart History (Hot Country Songs)'. Billboard.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Happy,_Happy_Birthday_Baby&oldid=923605309'