
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Sped-up voices. Wacky instruments. Songs about cavemen, bathtubs, bikinis, and mothers-in-law. From the dawn of rock ‘n’ roll through the 1970s—the age of streaking, CB radios, disco and King Tut—novelty songs could be chart-topping hits. But by the corporate ’80s, it was harder for goofballs to score hits on regimented radio playlists. Until one perm-headed, mustachioed, accordion-playing parodist who called himself “Weird” rebooted novelty hits for the new millennium.
In this encore episode of Hit Parade, Chris Molanphy explores the history of novelty hits on the charts.
Podcast production by Justin D. Wright and Kevin Bendis.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By Slate Podcasts4.8
20202,020 ratings
Sped-up voices. Wacky instruments. Songs about cavemen, bathtubs, bikinis, and mothers-in-law. From the dawn of rock ‘n’ roll through the 1970s—the age of streaking, CB radios, disco and King Tut—novelty songs could be chart-topping hits. But by the corporate ’80s, it was harder for goofballs to score hits on regimented radio playlists. Until one perm-headed, mustachioed, accordion-playing parodist who called himself “Weird” rebooted novelty hits for the new millennium.
In this encore episode of Hit Parade, Chris Molanphy explores the history of novelty hits on the charts.
Podcast production by Justin D. Wright and Kevin Bendis.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

38,474 Listeners

11,471 Listeners

26,180 Listeners

5,985 Listeners

1,378 Listeners

3,143 Listeners

1,966 Listeners

1,504 Listeners

2,679 Listeners

1,019 Listeners

2,859 Listeners

998 Listeners

1,029 Listeners

5,647 Listeners

1,873 Listeners

53 Listeners

239 Listeners

23,926 Listeners

4,127 Listeners

2,111 Listeners

1,287 Listeners

1,009 Listeners

1,190 Listeners

441 Listeners

1,043 Listeners

60 Listeners

1,135 Listeners

48 Listeners

97 Listeners

5 Listeners

134 Listeners

0 Listeners