"Dick in a Box" is another recent classic novelty song, and video. It's not a song parody, but it does parody boy band video conventions.
No, not really with the boy band video conventions, but it does parody the immediate pre-grunge era top 40 music video style effectively.
I'd definitely say not a novelty act, though some of her songs are funny enough to qualify.
Right. "O Superman" is a serious song, but it was a hit as a novelty. Dry irony can be mistaken.
Oftentimes the novelty of the song is that it's an unfamiliar genre. The first rap hit, "Double Dutch" was sold as a novelty. "Stars on 45" were also considered novelty songs. Cut-ins were novelties.
but it does parody the immediate pre-grunge era top 40 music video style effectively.
Yeah, I guess boy bands didn't really sport that beard that Justin was wearing in the video.
So it sounds like a humorous video for a non-novelty song can also create a novelty. Maybe the classic example is David Lee Roth's medley of "Just a Gigolo/I Ain't Got Nobody." Where the song itself is sung pretty straight-forwardly, but the video parodies everyone from Willie Nelson to Boy George.
But where does that leave something like "Centerfold"?
Maybe the classic example is David Lee Roth's medley of "Just a Gigolo/I Ain't Got Nobody."
That is a good example. But a lot of videos are novelties or have parodic elements even when the song isn't. There are like five or six videos I can think of offhand that played off the Robert Palmer Zombie Girl Supermodel look.
But where does that leave something like "Centerfold"?
As with most genre taxonomies it's rarely an either/or question but a matter of spectrum and degree.
I wouldn't call that song a novelty, though the J. Geils Band
did
do some novelty songs, my favorite being "No Anchovies Please."
So what does a band have to do to be pegged with the "Novelty band" label? Just one novelty song? One
popular
novelty song? Or does having a large existing oeuvre of "serious" songs before releasing a novelty song protect a band from the "novelty band" label?
Was David Bowie considered a novelty act (due to "Laughing Gnome") before
Space Oddity
or
The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars
came out?
Was David Bowie considered a novelty act (due to "Laughing Gnome") before Space Oddity or The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars came out?
No, he was considered a failed mod, Anthony Newley copycat and a twee-as-fuck folkie.
Heh.
eta: Yeah, even back then, Bowie's collected works sorta' had this "I'll do anything to be famous and popular" aura to them.
I mean, seriously, Anthony Newley?!
Speaking of which, I've found a source for Newley's super bizarre semi-porny 8 1/2 ripoff Can Hieronymous Merkin Ever Forget Mercy Hump and Find True Happiness and am tempted to get it (once I have discretionary income again).
Merkin focuses on his promiscuous relationships with women, particularly Polyester Poontang (played by Newley's wife Joan Collins) and the adolescent Mercy Humppe (Playboy centerfold Connie Kreski). Merkin is constantly surrounded by a Satan-like procurer, Goodtime Eddie Filth (Milton Berle), and an angelic 'Presence' (George Jessel) who interrupts Merkin's biography with cryptic Borscht Belt-level jokes to denote births and deaths in Merkin's life.
What a train wreck! Though, as the wikipedia notes, it's basically the same format that Fosse used for
All That Jazz.
I wouldn't call that song a novelty, though the J. Geils Band did do some novelty songs, my favorite being "No Anchovies Please."
Meanwhile back in Portland, Maine...
"Oh my god! That bowling ball! It's my WIFE!!!!!"
Was David Bowie considered a novelty act (due to "Laughing Gnome") before Space Oddity or The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders From Mars came out?
Wasn't Space Oddity the song considered a bit of a novelty song when it first came out?