One Walk of Fame star and a huge repertoire of hilarious songs
By Caroline Ho, Assistant Editor
Everyoneâs favourite accordion-playing musical parody master Weird Al has long been an unequivocal staple of modern pop culture.
The musician and satiristâs illustrious four-decade-long career is still going strong, especially after the recent August 27 accolade of a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. With this star, awarded in the category of recording, he joins the ranks of over 2,600 actors, musicians, producers, and other entertainers honoured with their names engraved on Hollywood Boulevard.
Alfred Matthew âWeird Alâ Yankovic began recording and releasing comedic songs in 1976. Since then his resumĂ© has included 14 studio albums, 10 compilation albums, 54 music videos, and over 150 comedic songs full of clever parodies and ingenious genre mash-ups, backed by a persona thatâs quirkily, admirably wholesome.
Prolific and long-spanning as his career has been, no doubt everyone has their own favourite Weird Al songs. Nonetheless, letâs take this opportunity to recognize a few of his more clever, memorable, and iconic compositions.
The Saga Begins (1999)
Iâve heard people remark that this masterpiece is the only reason they know the original song, Don McLeanâs 1971 classic âAmerican Pie,â and the only reason they know anything about the first Star Wars prequel movie. This pop-culture-didacticism is a common theme in a lot of Weird Al songs and part of the reason heâs such a legend. Beyond that, every line of this parodyâstarting with from the introductory âA long, long time ago/In a galaxy far awayâ is poignantly descriptive and hilarious. The music video, with Weird Al as Obi-Wan, probably features better acting than The Phantom Menace anyway.
Amish Paradise (1996)
Deserving of a spot on any Weird Al song list, âAmish Paradiseâ reworks the melancholy ambience and slick raps of âGangstaâs Paradiseâ by Coolio featuring L.V. (which itself samples âPastime Paradiseâ by Stevie Wonder). The juxtaposition of hard street life and technology-shunning traditionalismâtwo opposites on a spectrum of badasseryâis executed brilliantly through absurdly solemn descriptions of idyllic Amish life, sprinkled with both archaic language and rap-inspired interjections of âFool!â
Another One Rides the Bus (1981)
This spoof of Queenâs âAnother One Bites the Dustâ is the Metro Vancouver transit-userâs must-have. The driving pace and iconic riff of the original transposes very fittingly into the impassioned, accordion-backed Weird Al version, which describes an uncomfortable, all too familiar experience of being stuck on an increasingly-packed bus. Itâs gloriously painful for its relatability.
Angry White Boy Polka (2003)
I admit I personally am predisposed to love and hate this song because it parodies virtually my exact musical taste (I unironically thrive on Disturbedâs âDown with the Sicknessâ and System of a Downâs âChop Sueyâ). Yet we canât omit acknowledging the genius of Weird Alâs signature medleys, which are comprised of polka-style song covers. Again, theyâre surprisingly effective at exposing listeners to some huge hits and perhaps letting you enjoy those hits a little more shamelessly.