Wesley Willis: Difference between revisions

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According to Wikipedia, [[Wesley Willis|Willis]] began a career as an underground singer-songwriter in the outsider music tradition, with songs featuring his bizarre, humorous and often obscene lyrics sung over the auto-accompaniment feature on an electronic keyboard.In other words, this guy sounds totally like JC’s kind of dude
According to Wikipedia, [[Wesley Willis]] “began a career as an underground singer-songwriter in the outsider music tradition, with songs featuring his bizarre, humorous and often obscene lyrics sung over the auto-accompaniment feature on an electronic keyboard”.


He has at least one song which has caught the [[JC]]'s attention already: [[Spank Wagon]], which uses the adjective [[equitable]] imaginatively — in that it doesn't seem to apply it to a [[noun]] of any kind.
In other words, this guy sounds totally like [JC]]’s kind of dude.
 
Willis has at least one song which has caught the [[JC]]'s attention already: [[Spank Wagon]], which uses the adjective [[equitable]] imaginatively — in that it doesn't seem to apply it to a [[noun]] of any kind.


Eyes peeled in the bargain bins, dudes. There’s undiscovered gold out there.
Eyes peeled in the bargain bins, dudes. There’s undiscovered gold out there.

Revision as of 15:53, 14 March 2019

According to Wikipedia, Wesley Willis “began a career as an underground singer-songwriter in the outsider music tradition, with songs featuring his bizarre, humorous and often obscene lyrics sung over the auto-accompaniment feature on an electronic keyboard”.

In other words, this guy sounds totally like [JC]]’s kind of dude.

Willis has at least one song which has caught the JC's attention already: Spank Wagon, which uses the adjective equitable imaginatively — in that it doesn't seem to apply it to a noun of any kind.

Eyes peeled in the bargain bins, dudes. There’s undiscovered gold out there.

See also