My Bologna Explained

My Bologna
Cover:My Bologna Commercial Single.jpg
Type:single
Album:"Weird Al" Yankovic
B-Side:School Cafeteria
Released:
  • December 25, 1979
  • May 3, 1983
Recorded:
  • September 1979
  • March 14, 1982 (1983 recording)
Genre:
Length:
  • 2:20 (single version)
  • 2:03 (album version)
Label:
Producer:
  • "Weird Al" Yankovic (1979 recording)
  • Rick Derringer (1983 recording)
Next Title:Another One Rides the Bus
Next Year:1981

"My Bologna" is the debut single by American musical parody artist "Weird Al" Yankovic, originally released in December 1979. It is a parody of the Knack's hit song "My Sharona". Yankovic originally wrote the lyrics while he attended California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo, California; the original version of the parody was recorded in a bathroom across the hall from the radio station at which Yankovic worked. The title refers to Bologna sausage, specifically the Oscar Mayer brand popular in the United States. Yankovic sent "My Bologna" to Dr. Demento, who aired the song on his nationwide radio program, The Dr. Demento Show. The song was a hit on the program, and eventually gained the number one spot on Dr. Demento's "Funny Five" countdown.

After a fortuitous encounter with Doug Fieger (the lead singer of the Knack), and Rupert Perry (then-vice president of Capitol Records), Capitol Records decided to release it as a single. Yankovic was paid $500 for the master tape of the song, and its B-side, "School Cafeteria". A month after its commercial release, the single sold 10,000 copies. The song also received positive—albeit limited—reviews from media outlets. Although a music video was never produced for the song, an "unofficial" video was filmed, featuring a young Yankovic lip-syncing to this song at Cuesta College in December 1979. "My Bologna" was later re-recorded and released on Yankovic's debut album (1983), and the "bathroom version" was re-released on the box sets (1994) and (2017).

Background and recording

In the late 1970s, Alfred "Weird Al" Yankovic, was a student at California Polytechnic State University (Cal Poly) in San Luis Obispo, California, and in his spare time, he was a DJ for the university's radio station, KCPR. Yankovic had a penchant for comedy music and often played it on his radio show. In mid-1979, the song "My Sharona" by the Knack was receiving heavy airplay on the radio, and Yankovic started to consider spoofing the single. This parody eventually came to fruition during an ad hoc jam session with his friend Jon Iverson; while Iverson played the main riff to "My Sharona" on his guitar, Yankovic began to write lyrics for his parody. Yankovic's lyrics eventually coalesced into "My Bologna", an ode to the Oscar Mayer brand of Bologna sausage. The duo started to play it in and around the Cal Poly campus at parties and local theaters.[2]

In September 1979, Yankovic decided to record his parody in the men's bathroom across from the KCPR offices, because the tiled room made "an acoustically perfect studio." Taped using musical equipment from the radio station, the original version of "My Bologna" featured only Yankovic's vocals accompanied by his accordion.[3] Yankovic then sent his recording to Barret "Dr. Demento" Hansen, a radio personality who hosted the syndicated Dr. Demento Show, which showcased comedy and oddball music.[4] According to Dr. Demento himself, "The response I got when I played ['My Bologna'] on the air dwarfed not only that for all [Yankovic's] earlier tapes, but practically everything else I played that whole year."[3]

Release

On September 27, 1979, Yankovic received a type-written note from Dr. Demento informing him that "My Bologna" was a smash hit on his radio show, and that Capitol Records had contacted the station, requesting a copy of the spoof for the Knack themselves.[5] [6] Later, the Knack performed at Cal Poly, and Yankovic approached the band and Rupert Perry (then-vice president of Capitol Records) backstage. He informed them of who he was, and, according to Yankovic, "[the Knack lead singer] Doug Fieger [...] said 'Oh, ['My Bologna' is] a really a great song!' and then he turned to Rupert Perry and said 'You guys oughta put this song out on Capitol Records' and Rupert said 'OK, let's do it!'"[3] Yankovic was paid $500 for the song's master, as well as the master for the soon-to-be b-side track "School Cafeteria". The "My Bologna" single was released on Christmas Day, 1979 (a month after the Knack's concert at Cal Poly) and Yankovic was given a six-month contract.[3] [7]

On March 14, 1982, Yankovic re-recorded the song for his debut album, "Weird Al" Yankovic.[8] He later joked that this was done because "somehow, we thought [the song] might sound better recorded in a professional 24-track studio than [it] did when [it was] recorded in a bathroom".[9] The Capitol Records single version also appears on (1994)[3] and (2017).[10] "School Cafeteria" was never re-recorded or made available on any studio albums, although a live-on-the-radio version was released on the compilation album Dr. Demento's Basement Tapes 7.[11]

Reception

Prior to the single's commercial release, the song was a hit on the Dr. Demento Show, and landed at number one on the radio show's "Funny Five" countdown chart.[12] Within a month of the single being released by Capitol, it had sold 10,000 copies.[13] However, Yankovic soon learned that Capitol Records had no interest in promoting the single.[3]

The first industry mention of the single came from Variety; in an article, the magazine erroneously listed the song's creator as "Wendell Yankovich" and noted that "the tune—not too seriously, folks—is called 'My Bologna', based on you-know-what."[7] In a later review of Yankovic's debut album, Eugene Chadbourne of AllMusic praised the re-recorded version of the song, writing: "'My Bologna' demonstrated the [...] fine art of making the stupid much stupider. A later album title by this artist would be Dare to Be Stupid, and if the Knack's 'My Sharona' had to be sacrificed at his creative altar for this to be understood, so be it."[14]

Music video

Although an official video was never released, an "unofficial" video was filmed, featuring a young Yankovic lip-syncing to this song at Cuesta College in December 1979. as part of a final project for a TV production class for a Cal Poly, KCPR classmate, Randy Kerdoon.[15] Yankovic—who later referred to the video as "absolutely terrible, yet of earth-shatteringly profound historical significance"—credits Kerdoon for producing and directing his first music video.[16] [17] This unofficial music video is included on the DVD (2003) as an Easter egg.

Legacy

Yankovic's 2022 comedy biographical film Weird: the Al Yankovic Story satirically claims that Yankovic was inspired to pen "My Bologna" after he heard "My Sharona" on the radio while he was making bologna sandwiches.[18] A 2022 re-recording of the song was also included as part of the movie's soundtrack.[19]

Personnel

See also

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: My Bologna – Weird Al Yankovic. AllMusic. February 5, 2017.
  2. News: Pemberton. Patrick. 'Weird Al' Yankovic: Cal Poly Alum Still Getting Laughs After 35 Years. January 18, 2017. The Tribune. July 24, 2014.
  3. Permanent Record: Al in the Box – Notes By Dr. Demento. "Weird Al" Yankovic. 1994. Barret. Hansen. Dr. Demento. liner. Scotti Brothers Records. California, United States.
  4. Rabin and Yankovic 2012, p. 20.
  5. Web site: Yankovic. Al. When I got this letter about "My Bologna" being on the Dr. Demento Top Ten, I thought, "My life's never going to get any better than THIS!". Twitter. December 17, 2016. December 14, 2016.
  6. Rabin and Yankovic 2012, p. 23.
  7. Rabin and Yankovic 2012, p. 25.
  8. Web site: "Weird Al" Yankovic: Recording Dates. September 15, 2006 . https://web.archive.org/web/20060913095310/http://www.weirdal.com/rcdgdate.htm . September 13, 2006. WeirdAl.com.
  9. Web site: Yankovic, Al. 'Ask Al' Q&As for January, 1999. December 17, 2016 . WeirdAl.com.
  10. . "Weird Al" Yankovic. 2017. liner. Legacy Recordings. New York City, United States.
  11. Web site: Unreleased "Weird Al" Yankovic Recordings . Jeff . Morris . The Demented Music Database . June 5, 2011.
  12. Rabin and Yankovic 2012, pp. 22–25.
  13. Rabin and Yankovic 2012, p. 24.
  14. Web site: [{{AllMusic|class=album|id=r82658|pure_url=yes}} 'Weird Al' Yankovic – Overview ]. December 17, 2016 . . . Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
  15. Web site: Randy Kerdoon. CBS Los Angeles. December 17, 2016. April 9, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20161220164921/http://losangeles.cbslocal.com/personality/randy-kerdoon/. December 20, 2016. dead.
  16. Web site: Yankovic, Al. 'Ask Al' Q&As for April 27, 2006. December 17, 2016 . WeirdAl.com.
  17. Web site: Kerdoon. Randy. Randy Kerdoon. LinkedIn. December 17, 2016.
  18. . 2022 . Motion picture . . Appel, Eric (director and co-writer); Yankovic, Al (co-writer).
  19. Weird: The Al Yankovic Story (Original Soundtrack) . Yankovic . Al . album liner notes . Legacy Recordings.