Selecta Theme Song Piano

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Llanque Mazurek

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Aug 3, 2024, 5:10:20 PM8/3/24
to trosenepab

Thanks Picaroon for a most enjoyable prize. I solved a number of the across clues which then helped me solve KEYBOARD. My top picks were TYPISTS, the brilliant FRANZ LISZT, CARETS, the very clever PAELLA, and EXISTENCES. I did use assistance to get DVORAK, UNA CORDA, and RECOVERY, all beyond my orbit. Thanks bridgesong for the blog.

I finished this fairly quickly, ie it was still Saturday, but I solved KEYBOARD reasonably soon, I managed a couple of across clues and that helped with 8a.
Last week seems a long time ago to remember, but I do recall the penny dropping with PAELLA. I loved that one.
Thanks both.

I agree with all the points made by Tony Collman@2 and like Biggles A@6, I had celeste, never having seen the alternative spelling. Favourites have all been mentioned already. UNA CORDA was my TILT and I was surprised to find it was a mechanical device rather than a keyboard virtuoso. ?

FRANZ LISZT was a write in for me and I never stopped to wonder about homophones. Just as I came to the clue, my radio started playing Lang Lang performing La Campanella by Liszt. Was it a gift or just coincidence?

Thanks for the blog , Tony @2 has made a lot of my points. Poetaster from 4D was in a few days before this one. Many theme words linked to computer keyboards, could there be anything more interesting ?
I am not a fan of the same setter twice in a row for the prize, unless the Guardian has discovered a stack of unused Bunthorne puzzles , I live in hope.

Enjoyed this very much, having luckily got DVORAK and ART TATUM early on. I remembered UNA CORDA from childhood piano lessons, but assumed that BANGLE = a band worn round the wrist = bracelet, having not heard of the girl group. Failed completely with 10ac for no good reason. Thanks to setter and blogger.

Unable to solve 8ac immediately, I decided to start on the down clues first but did not have much luck there either apart from THRENODY. Returning to the across clues, I solved GLENN GOULD which gave me a hint to the theme and finally managed to solve KEYBOARD after 15ac TYPISTS. Difficult but quite enjoyable.

Thanks Picaroon and bridgesong. DNF this one. Five still unsolved at the end. Tried for a long time to find a keyboard player called Something Young. I think PAELLA would have been my favourite clue, too, if I had got it!

Here was yet another heavily themed puzzle that was anything but heavy-going. I got into the theme not from KEYBOARD directly but from DVORAK, which I remembered as being a keyboard layout (an alternative to QWERTY). I enjoyed very much working the theme through all of the Across clues: from keys on keyboards to musicians and instruments. I knew all the musical references, including UNA CORDA, which muffin @21 has explained perfectly, and GLENN GOULD, which took me a bit longer to remember.

JohnB@42, unfriendly for the solver, but much easier for the setter when they want to place a large number of themed entries in the grid. Also useful, of course, for including perimetrical ninas. Either of those features should help the solver, in principle, so the lack of all those first letters is (somewhat) compensated for.

From the OE
(as a noun): The use of a word in such a way as to suggest two or more meanings or different associations, or the use of two or more words of the same or nearly the same sound with different meanings, so as to produce a humorous effect; a play on words
(as a verb): To make puns; to play on words

As for keyboard virtuosos youd have difficulty going past Tatum and Liszt and nice to see Glen humming along
I loved this puzzle particularly for including Dvorak as a keyboard and PAELLA as Spanish Main
Thy dont come much finer
Thanks JB

People like going out to clubs and bars, and when there, they like to listen to music and dance. Sometimes, however, the DJ just won't play the music loud enough. And sometimes, they won't play any music at all. Fortunately, songwriters don't deal with this frustration by complaining to the club manager and asking for the DJ's head on a platter. No, musicians know the best way to handle the situation is to write a song demanding the DJ play some music. At their most presumptuous, the musician might even demand the DJ play their music.

  • Rihanna's first big hit was the song "Pon de Replay," which featured one of the politest versions of the trope with the line, "Hey Mr. DJ, won't you turn the music up?"
  • She also has the song "Please Don't Stop the Music."
  • The Jennifer Lopez song "Play," which includes the lyrics, "Play/come on DJ/Play that song."
  • "Music", by Madonna - "Hey, Mr DJ, put a record on, I wanna dance with my baby."
  • "Re-Rewind (The Crowd Say Bo Selecta)", by the Artful Dodger feat. Craig David. By way of explanation, a "selecter" is a Jamaican term for a DJ and "bo!" was at the time (1999) an expression of approval for (mostly black) youth. The lyrics "Re-rewind, when the crowd say "Bo, selecta!" therefore mean roughly "Mr DJ, play the record again if everyone says they like it." The comedian Avid Merrion later adopted "Bo Selecta!" as the title for a TV series in which he parodied, amongst others, Craig David.
  • The genre is parodied in the theme tune to British sitcom Two Pints of Lager and a Packet of Crisps which begins "Hey, Mr Bartender, give me a drink..."
  • "Evacuate the Dance Floor" by Cascada.
  • John Reuben, "Trying Too Hard":Gettin' rowdy rowdy, man I ain't gonna front
    If the DJ plays my record, that's exactly what I want
  • Skindred's "Selector" alternates between praising the DJ's skills and exhorting him to "play the tune again".
  • Lee "Scratch" Perry's "Yu Squeeze My Panhandle".
  • Macy Grey (with the Black Eyed Peas) has "Request Line."
  • "Having a Party" by Sam Cooke may be the Trope Maker.
  • "Roll Over DJ" by Jet.
  • While Limp Bizkit's song "Rollin'" doesn't really fall under this, the "Urban Assault Vehicle" mix with DMX, Method Man and Redman does.
  • "Send My Love to the Dancefloor, I'll See You In Hell (Hey Mr. DJ)" by Cobra Starship.
  • The And One song "S.T.O.P. Was an Inside Job" contains the line "If they don't play And One in your disco/ We'll kill the DJ if you want."
  • "Scream and Shout" by will.i.am and Britney Spears has a weird example with the line "When you hear this in the club, you're gonna turn this shit up," as clubs don't generally give everyone control over the volume of the music.
  • "We R Who We R" by Kesha.
  • "Just Might Have Her Radio On" by Trent Tomlinson is a variant, with the male calling a radio DJ and requesting him to play a special song, in hopes that she will have her radio on, hear the song, and be driven to turn around and return to him.
  • Played for Laughs in "DJ Play My Song (No Leave Me Alone)" by The Gregory Brothers, in which the DJ keeps trying to explain that he doesn't take requests and the music is already as loud as it will go.
  • In "Murder on the Dance Floor," Sophie Ellis-Bextor warns the DJ not to change what he's playing: "But you better not kill the groove/DJ, gonna burn this goddamn house right down."
  • Van Morrison's "Domino" wraps up with this:Well, mister DJI just wanna hear some rhythm and blues musicOn the radioOn the radioOn the radio...
  • Filipino singer-actress Sharon Cuneta came up with a soft version of this whose lyrics go: "Mr DJ, can I make a request; pwede ba yung love song ko?" (the Tagalog translates to: "will my love song do?")
  • Billy Joel used a old-timey variation on this in the chorus of "Piano Man" (the difference is that he's making the request to a piano player for a small bar, instead of a more modern DJ).
  • Dev's "Booty Bounce". "DJ, put that record on, that's my song, that's my shi-"
  • "Mr. DJ" by the Charlie Daniels Band, where he name-checks Willie Nelson, Hank Williams Jr., the Oak Ridge Boys, Ricky Skaggs, Alabama, George Jones, and Mickey Gilley.
  • "Hey Mr. DJ, I Thought You Said We Had a Deal" by They Might Be Giants is about a struggling musician who tries to bribe a DJ into getting one of his songs airplay, only to find the DJ has skipped town with his money.
  • "Floorfiller" by A-Teens gets bonus points for a chorus that tells Mr DJ to "Play that funky music", according to the official lyrics. It sounds a little different.
  • Downplayed and wistful in Charlie Dore's "Pilot of the Airwaves", where the singer tells the eponymous DJ, "Here is my request, you don't have to play it but I hope you'll do your best..."
  • Train's "Play That Song" in which the singer wants to play a specific song for his girlfriend.
  • "Last Request" by Frazier River. The man doesn't even know what the song is, but asks the DJ to play it and give out his name. It's an attempt to get a lost love to notice him, with the implication that he may commit suicide otherwise.
  • A Brazilian song has a variant, asking the waiter to change the music in the bar because it's one as heartbroken as the narrator, otherwise "your 10% are gonna rise".

Deliberate inversions:

  • Inverted in "Don't play that song again" by Nicki French.
  • Also "Please Mr. Please" by Olivia Newton-John, which implores a jukebox patron not to play B-17.
  • Selectively inverted by "Weird Al" Yankovic's "Achy Breaky Song". "But Mr. DJ, please, I'm begging on my knees, I just can't take no more of Billy Ray."
  • Subverted by The Smiths in the song "Panic", the chorus of which is the catchy refrain "Hang the DJ, hang the DJ, hang the DJ, hang the DJ..." etc.
  • Similarly, Green Day's song "Kill the DJ." ("Someone kill the DJ, shoot the fucking DJ. Someone kill the DJ, shoot that fucker down.")
  • The Dingees' "Who Stole the Soul in Rock N Roll?" encourages listeners to "Hang the DJ, have no fear," and asserts that "It's quitting time for modern rock radio."
  • In "Blow" Kesha sings "It's time to kill the lights and shut the DJ down" (so that she and her friends can take over the club).
  • "Rollover DJ" by Jet.

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