To the Tune of "Witch Doctor" by the Chipmunks
Keep in mind it's a parody, political satire, musings of a bored mind...
Thanks to my husband for coming up with the word.
OK, here is my work in progress:::
It goes like this:
I told the Witch Doctor I wanted someone new
to stir up the economy and make our grey skies blue...
i told the Witch Doctor, and now I think we're screwed
Cuz he said
Ooh Eee Ooh ah ah, Ting Tong Obamalamadingdong....
OOh Eee Ooh ah all obamalongadingdong day
I thought he promised to bring jobs to our land
Instead he's promised to be Allah's right hand man..(yea I know it's far fetched but it rhymed)
And all he's done so far is mess us up real bad...
I'm thinkin
Ooh Eee Ooh ah ah, Ting Tang obamalamading dong
Ooh Eee Ooh ah all Obamalamadingdong day
He blames the Bushmeister for every other thing
because the previous adminstrations easier
to pick on don't ya think?
What we really need are the conservatives to set us straight
I'm sayin....
Ooh Eee Ooh ah ah, Ting Tang obamalamading dong
OOh Eee OOh ah ah, some one else's drama's better any day ... :)
The Witch Doctor http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alvin_and_the_Chipmunks#The_Witch_Doctor
Main article: Witch Doctor (song)
A Hasbro board game from 1959 featuring the Chipmunks in their early version.In early 1958, Bagdasarian released a novelty song (as David Seville) about being unsuccessful at love until he found a witch doctor who told him "What To Do" to woo his woman. The song was done by Bagdasarian in his normal voice, except for the "magic" eyes, done first in Bagdasarian's pitched-up, pre-Chipmunk voice, then in a duet between his pitched-up voice and his normal voice. The words are nonsense: "Oo-ee, oo-ah-ah, ting-tang, walla-walla, bing-bang". The "Walla Walla" part of the song was just thrown in as a reference to Bagdasarian's uncle who lived in Walla Walla, Washington.
The song was a major hit, holding Number 1 for three weeks in the Billboard Top 100, a predecessor to the Billboard Hot 100 chart which would be introduced that August, and the Witch Doctor's "magic words" were sung by kids in many countries.[1] Nothing makes any reference to chipmunks, but the song is sometimes included on Chipmunk compilations, as if the Chipmunks had provided the voice of the Witch Doctor. Bagdasarian did record a "Chipmunks" version of "Witch Doctor", which appeared on the second Chipmunks album, Sing Again with The Chipmunks, in 1960.
The song gained new attention when it was sung by Homer Simpson in an episode of The Simpsons in 2006.
A followup song was recorded by Bagdasarian titled "The Bird on My Head" with Bagdasarian (again as Seville) singing a duet with his own sped-up voice as the bird. It also reached the Top 40, peaking at #34.[2]
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