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To The Tune Of aka: God Save The King
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''"The Red Flag": nice tune, shame about the words."
So you've got some lyrics. They're wonderful, they're catchy, but you just can't seem to come up with the right music...
Hey, why not just put it to the tune of an older song?
One of The Oldest Ones in the Book, as many, many traditional songs and national anthems do this. This can produce a very dissonant effect if the two songs have completely different moods. It's also common in hymnody; most traditional hymnals include the meter signature for each text so it can be easily matched to other tunes; e.g., Common Meter (8.6.8.6 — used by Amazing Freaking Grace and many others).
See also Suspiciously Similar Song. Sampled Up is when this version completely eclipses the original. Filk Songs are very frequently set to the tune of existing songs.
Examples:
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Film
- In the 1988 comedy Moon over Parador, the new president changes the national anthem to "Parador, te amo" ("I love you, Parador"), which goes to the tune of "Bésame Mucho". Sammy Davis Jr. sings it.
Live Action TV
- Community episode "Comparative Religion" ends with the group performing an inclusive, secularized rewrite of "Silent Night". (Sensible night, appropriate night / Snow on ground, left and right...)
- Monty Python's "The Lumberjack Song" and the older The Goon Show song "Ying Tong Song" both use very similar arrangements to Eddie Morton's "I'm a Member of the Midnight Crew"
, which was long out of print when the two shows came along. (You might recognize it from it being referenced in Homestuck.)
Sport
- Just about every Australian Football League club theme song is an existing song with rewritten lyrics, as can be seen here
. The only exceptions are Fremantle (which includes a small section from "Song of the Volga Boatmen"), Port Adelaide and West Coast.
- The Perth Wildcats' anthem
is to the tune of the "Hallelujah Chorus".
Theatre
- Entire genres of theatre work under this principle. For instance, "ballad operas" — the most famous probably being John Gay's The Beggar's Opera — took popular tunes and rewrote their lyrics to tell a story. (Note, though, that Weill and Brecht's adaptation of The Beggar's Opera, The Threepenny Opera, had original music, except for the "Morning Anthem", which reused one of the 18th-century tunes.) The genres of "burlesque", "extravaganza" and a few others were the same. Most of these genres are completely or near-completely dead, except for British pantomimes (a sort of very silly Christmas show, with crossdressing and audience participation), which appear every year in Britain.
- Also, if composers borrowing their own work counts, almost all of Händel's operas, cantatas and oratorios borrowed music from himself or even adapted from other composers, in varying amounts.
Webcomics
- The song sung by the Easter Bunny in Sluggy Freelance is not-so-subtly modified from Monty Python's Lumberjack song.
- In The Order of the Stick #445 (titled A Song for the Departed), Elan sings a song which is told in a note that it's sung to the tune of "O Danny Boy". Warning, spoilers!*]]
Western Animation
- Family Guy did this several times. The tune for "The FCC Song" is from Take Me Along, an old Broadway musical. The tune for "A Bag of Weed" is from Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. Whether a given song from the show counts as this trope or straight-up parody mostly depends on how obscure the originals were.
- One of the cases on Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law consisted of him prosecuting for a Japanese band called Shoyu Weenie, who were accusing the Neptunes (yes, from Jabberjaw) of stealing their hit.
- The Simpsons — "O Whacking Day" is strong Lyrical Dissonance for Americans and Germans familiar with the yuletide hymn "O Christmas Tree", less so for Britons who know the bloodthirsty lyrics of the revolutionary hymn of the same tune.
- The Totally Spies! theme tune uses the tune of the rather obscure song "Here We Go" by Moonbaby.
Real Life
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