âWeird Alâ Yankovicâs 40-year career has outlasted some of the artists heâs parodied
Nearly 40 years ago âWeird Alâ Yankovic began building his fan base the old-fashioned way: radio.
Yankovic would send tapes to disc jockey and comedy song expert Dr. Demento, who gave air time to Yankovicâs early parodies of the Knackâs then-chart-topping new wave hit âMy Sharonaâ (recast as âMy Bolognaâ) and Queenâs âAnother One Bites the Dustâ (as âAnother One Rides the Busâ).
For the record:
9:01 a.m. Nov. 30, 2024An earlier version of this post said âAlpocalypseâ was released in 2009. It was released in 2011. The story also described âSqueeze Boxâ as a 16-disc set. It will include 15 discs. The crowd-funding PledgeMusic.com site through which the box set is being promoted is not a wing of Sony Legacy, but a separate entity.
Times have changed.
On-demand services have arguably supplanted radio, and Dr. Demento, whose real name is Barret Hansen, jokes that the reaction today to Yankovic is a little different than it was back in the day.
âNow, the response is âMy God, is he still around?ââ
Not only is Yankovic still going strong â his most recent album, 2014âs âMandatory Fun,â debuted at No. 1 on the U.S. pop chart â but heâs out to experiment. As the music industry transitions from album sales to streaming, Yankovic, now free of his record deal, is questioning what it means to be a veteran independent artist in 2017.
âMy record contract is over, and Iâm not anticipating signing a new one,â he said.
Heâs at work on a major career retrospective, one that will be released under a crowd-sourcing-like model, and he says he envisions the future Yankovic to become a primarily singles-based artist.
âIâm not saying the album is a dying format or that itâs not a valid medium,â he said. âBut for me it always held me back a little bit. I know that sounds a little ironic after coming off a No. 1 album. But I have to stay true to what I think is the best way for me to get my material out.â
Chief among his concerns: the shelf life for a comedy song in the age of YouTube.
âItâs been frustrating in the past to have an idea for a song, then to write it and record it, and then have it sit in the can for a year until I have 12 songs to release all at once,â he said. âIn todayâs culture, where people have a short attention span and there are 10 million people on YouTube doing song parodies and funny material, things age pretty badly, and very quickly.
âFor me to be competitive at all,â he continued, âI think it behooves me to think more of myself as a singles artist going forward.â
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Not only is Yankovic still going strong â his most recent album, 2014âs âMandatory Fun,â debuted at No. 1 on the U.S. pop chart â but heâs out to experiment.
First, though, Yankovic, who lives comfortably with his wife â photographer Suzanne Yankovic â and their 14-year-old daughter, Nina, in the Hollywood Hills, is hard at work again, this time helping Sony Legacy compile a career-spanning box set, titled â what else? â âSqueeze Box.â
It will be housed in a replica of one of his signature accordions.
The 15-disc collection will gather all his original studio albums, from 1983âs ââWeird Alâ Yankovicâ through âMandatory Fun,â plus a bonus disc of rarities, a 100-page book of photos and other âWeird Alâ ephemera.
Those albums have sold more than 9.2 million copies in the U.S. since Nielsen Music began monitoring retail sales in 1991.
The way âSqueeze Boxâ is being rolled out is reflective of a new era in the music business.
Yankovic and Sony Legacy are promoting it through PledgeMusic.com, a direct-to-consumer site that functions like a crowd-funding site. PledgeMusic has begun taking orders for the set with a target release date of this fall. This ensures that production will be able to keep a close pace with consumer demand.
Yankovic says the project was Legacyâs idea.
He quickly disperses any suspicions on the part of his visitor that all this looking back meant he was ready to slow down.
âIâm not retiring â at least I hope Iâm not,â he said with the easy laugh that punctuates many of his comments. âI like to think Iâm going to continue to be active. But this seemed like a good demarcation, it seemed like the end of an era.â
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Itâs now been a bit more than 40 years since the four-time Grammy Award winner from Lynwood started seeping into the public consciousness, all thanks to an original song, âBelvedere Cruising,â which he wrote about his familyâs Plymouth Belvedere, and mailed in 1976 to L.A.-based radio-show host Dr. Demento.
So what was it about âBelvedere Cruisingâ that caught Hansenâs ear?
âThere was a line in that song, âThereâs something about a Comet/That makes me want to vomit,ââ said Hansen, who still assembles a weekly show spotlighting âfunny musicâ for Internet radio on his website. âHe was referencing all these different car models and why they canât compare to the Belvedere. That line woke me up. I thought, âThis kid has some talent.â He sent me another song, and then another, and they just kept getting better and better.â
It led to a 1982 record deal with the Columbia-associated Scotti Brothers label.
Over the ensuing decades Yankovic would amass an authoritative body of seriously silly work. Many of his songs have tweaked the overarching seriousness of the entertainment world while also demonstrating a canny grasp of what is au courant in the pop music world at any given time.
The Doorsâ drummer John Densmore praised Yankovicâs pastiche of the iconic L.A. rock groupâs sound and look as âvery amusingâ in his song âCraigslist,â which is taken from his 2011 album âAlpocalypse.â
More recently he even pulled off the unlikely feat of bringing grammar and sentence structure into the forefront of pop music with âWord Crimes,â his sendup of Robin Thicke and Pharrell Williamsâ ubiquitous âBlurred Lines.â
Yankovicâs catalog, though it relies on skewed takes of popular hits, also offers essentially a snapshot of pop trends. Don McLean, Michael Jackson, Nirvana, Lady Gaga and Taylor Swift are among the many acts who fell in Yankovicâs crosshairs.
Heâs usually received the greatest attention for his individual song parodies, but he also has crafted smart pastiches in the style of specific artists such as Brian Wilson (âPancreasâ), Bob Dylan (âBob,â a song consisting completely of palindromes) and L.A. art-pop duo Sparks (âVirus Alertâ).
Sparks founding member Ron Mael said this week, âHe makes me laugh and who can explain his immense popularity not only within our shores, but in non-English-speaking countries like Japan? Freaky.â
His brand of parody is generally considered legally safe under the 1st Amendmentâs free speech protections and âfair useâ interpretations of U.S. copyright law, but Yankovic still prefers to work with the permission of the artists whose songs he tweaks. Thatâs meant he has skipped Paul McCartney, Prince and Eminem, all of whom declined to give permission when he approached them with parody ideas.
On the other hand, some artists are more than willing. He credits Madonna for suggesting the idea of turning her 1984 hit âLike a Virginâ into âLike a Surgeon.â
Today, Yankovic has outlasted many of the acts he lampooned â lovingly, for the most part â including Survivor, Men Without Hats and the Police. Not bad for a novelty act; except maybe donât use that word around him.
âIt is novelty, but thatâs sort of a derisive term, or at least itâs used that way a lot,â he said. â[Itâs] generally considered the domain of one-hit wonders, which is something Iâve been fighting since I signed a record deal.â
As far as Yankovic is concerned, musicians who incorporate humor into their work in a big way are often marginalized.
âHumor is such an important part of the human experience,â he said. âI just donât know why showcasing it makes people think, âYouâre not a real artist.â Artists who inject humor into their music run the risk of being labeled a âjokeâ band.
âI wear that label proudly, of course, but itâs sad to me that other artists will hide the lighter side of their personality, or their sense of humor, because theyâre afraid that itâs going to get points marked off their grade.â
Novelty or not, Yankovic is genuinely excited about moving into a new phase of his career, one that embraces the technological changes that have flummoxed many in the music business.
âFor the first 15 years of my career,â Yankovic said, âeverybody was looking at me and going, âWhen is he going away? He was supposed to last like 15 minutes.â
âIt took me up until, gosh, probably the beginning of this century to get to the point where people decided âOh, I guess heâs going to stick around for a while.ââ
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