These are great. I know a child aged 6 or 7 who loved Neil Young and frequently could be heard singing "See the lonely boy, out on the weekend, tryin' to make a plate".[1]
Hendrix used to make a play on it live sometimes where he would actually mime kissing his bass player during Purple Haze because of the frequent mishearing of "'scuse me while I kiss the sky" as "'scuse me while I kiss this guy".
That web page doesn't mention one of my personal favourites, which is in Kid Charlemange by Steeley Dan where the original lyric "Did you realise that you were a champion in their eyes?" is very widely (and incorrectly) believed to be the headscratching and nonsensical "Did you realise that you were Italian in their eyes?"[2]
[1] The original is the slightly less joyful "tryin' to make it pay".
Whenever I read the first sentence of this page it makes me think that it's talking about, for example, the collapsing of "acronym" to also include initialisms.
I have a recent example that had some Charli XCX listeners dismayed - in B2b she says took a long time building muscle up, breaking muscle down, repeating it but some listeners heard her say myself instead of muscle. It could be intentional in this case.
I love this old Maxell ad. Still makes me laugh.
https://youtu.be/mxELSzay2lc?si=vPtg2y-ZkI3rDQMh
These are great. I know a child aged 6 or 7 who loved Neil Young and frequently could be heard singing "See the lonely boy, out on the weekend, tryin' to make a plate".[1]
Hendrix used to make a play on it live sometimes where he would actually mime kissing his bass player during Purple Haze because of the frequent mishearing of "'scuse me while I kiss the sky" as "'scuse me while I kiss this guy".
That web page doesn't mention one of my personal favourites, which is in Kid Charlemange by Steeley Dan where the original lyric "Did you realise that you were a champion in their eyes?" is very widely (and incorrectly) believed to be the headscratching and nonsensical "Did you realise that you were Italian in their eyes?"[2]
[1] The original is the slightly less joyful "tryin' to make it pay".
[2] This was sampled/ripped off by Kanye West
Knowledge is power.
France is bacon.
See also: afferbeck lauder, an Australian term meaning to use lexical comparison when sorting a list of items.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afferbeck_Lauder
The mother of all "mondegreens": https://www.youtube.com/shorts/bImP2zdxpng
at what point does the concept break? https://youtu.be/2GRnrFfURYo
Whenever I read the first sentence of this page it makes me think that it's talking about, for example, the collapsing of "acronym" to also include initialisms.
I have a recent example that had some Charli XCX listeners dismayed - in B2b she says took a long time building muscle up, breaking muscle down, repeating it but some listeners heard her say myself instead of muscle. It could be intentional in this case.
Charli XCX - B2b
NOTE: flashing black and white text that could trigger epilepsy https://youtube.com/watch?v=If4-ckGcr0c
"¿Esos son Reebok, o son Nike?" [0]
[0] https://youtube.com/watch?v=jd4TsegK9fQ
No mention of “In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida”?
I know it under Misheard lyrics.