T O P I C R E V I E W |
meethead97 |
Posted - 08/20/2003 : 12:06:54 AM Happy Birthday my love... I hope this day brings you all the happiness you deserve.
Thinking of you always, Brian |
8 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
Saint Jude |
Posted - 08/24/2003 : 1:11:20 PM Happy birthday... sorry the post is so late... but HAPPY BIRTHDAY. |
Miss Sorrel |
Posted - 08/21/2003 : 7:13:25 PM Thank you everybody!! I had an awesome birthday... I had been in my hometown for about a week so got to spend it with my parents and friends. If everyday for this next year is as good as my birthday I'll be a happy camper! |
dirtysloth |
Posted - 08/21/2003 : 10:51:51 AM Happy Birthday, Sorrel...hope it was a good one. |
Fluffy |
Posted - 08/21/2003 : 07:57:34 AM You say it's your birthday It's my birthday too--yeah They say it's your birthday We're gonna have a good time I'm glad it's your birthday Happy birthday to you.
Yes we're going to a party party Yes we're going to a party party Yes we're going to a party party.
I would like you to dance--Birthday Take a cha-cha-cha-chance-Birthday I would like you to dance--Birthday Dance
You say it's your birthday Well it's my birthday too--yeah You say it's your birthday We're gonna have a good time I'm glad it's your birthday Happy birthday to you. ------------------------------------------
Happy birthday, happy birthday Happy birthday, happy birthday Happy birthday, happy birthday
Happy, happy birthday in a hot bath To those nice nice nights I remember always, always I got such a fright Seeing them in my dark cupboard With my great big cake If they were me If they were me And I was you And I was you If they were me If they were me And I was you And I was you If they were me and I was you Would you have liked a present too?
Happy birthday, happy birthday ----------------------------------------------------
You know it doesn't make much sense There ought to be a law against Anyone who takes offense At a day in your celebration Cause we all know in our minds That there ought to be a time That we can set aside To show just how much we love you And I'm sure you would agree It couldn't fit more perfectly Than to have a world party on the day you came to be
Happy birthday to you Happy birthday to you Happy birthday
Happy birthday to you Happy birthday to you Happy birthday
(edited here to make sense, hehe)
Happy birthday to you Happy birthday to you Happy birthday
Happy birthday to you Happy birthday to you Happy birthday
(fade out early so it makes sense.....) ---------------------------------------------------
Happy birthday Happy birthday to you Happy birthday Happy birthday to you
Well, it's time to celebrate your birthday, it happens every year We'll eat a lot of broccoli and drink a lot of beer You should be good and happy that there's something you can eat A million npeople every day are starving in the street
Your daddy's in the gutter with the wretched and the poor Your mama's in the kitchen with a can of Cycle Four There's garbage in the water There's poison in the sky I guess it won't be long before we're all gonna die
Happy birthday Happy birthday to you Happy birthday Happy birthday to you
Well, what's the matter little friend, you think this party is the pits Enjoy it while you can, we'll soon be blown to bits The monkeys in the pentagon are gonna cook our goose Their finger's on the button, all they need it an excuse
It doesn't take a military genius to see We'll all be crispy critters after World War III There's nowhere you can run to, nowhere you can hide When they drop the big one, we all get fried
(Come on boys and girls, sing along, ok?)
Happy birthday Happy birthday to you Happy birthday Happy birthday to you wow! (background screaming, sound effect)
Well there's a punk in the alley and he's looking for a fight There's an Arab on the corner buying everything in sight There's a mother in the ghetto with another mouth to feed Seems that everywhere you look today there's misery and greed
I guess you know the Earth is gonna crash into the sun But that's no reason why we shouldn't have a little fun So if you think it's scary, if it's more than you can take Just blow out the candles and have a piece of cake
Happy birthday Happy birthday to you Happy birthday Happy birthday to you wow!
Happy birthday Happy birthday to you Happy birthday Happy birthday to you
(Happy Birthday!)
And a pinch to grow an inch! --------------------------------------------------------
Just look at u now Your all grown up Ready to go out into the this world You're like a flower That's blossomed in the morning sun This is your special day No one can have it or take it away Ohh..
One in every 365 days of the year We want to wish you happy birthday and many more my dear Happy birthday Happy birthday Happy birthday to you 2 (x) too you…. ----------------------------------------------------------
Fun Facts about Happy Birthday to You
Happy Birthday to You, the four-line ditty was written as a classroom greeting in 1893 by two Louisville teachers, Mildred J. Hill, an authority on Negro spirituals, and Dr. Patty Smith Hill, professor emeritus of education at Columbia University. The melody of the song Happy Birthday to You was composed by Mildred J. Hill, a schoolteacher born in Louisville, KY, on June 27, 1859. The song was first published in 1893, with the lyrics written by her sister, Patty Smith Hill, as "Good Morning To All." Happy Birthday to You was copyrighted in 1935 and renewed in 1963. The song was apparently written in 1893, but first copyrighted in 1935 after a lawsuit (reported in the New York Times of August 15, 1934, p.19 col. 6) In 1988, Birch Tree Group, Ltd. sold the rights of the song to Warner Communications (along with all other assets) for an estimated $25 million (considerably more than a song). (reported in Time, Jan 2, 1989 v133 n1 p88(1) In the 80s, the song Happy Birthday to You was believed to generate about $1 million in royalties annually. With Auld Lang Syne and For He's a Jolly Good Fellow, it is among the three most popular songs in the English language. (reported in Time, Jan 2, 1989 v133 n1 p88(1) Happy Birthday to You continues to bring in approximately 2 million dollars in licensing revenue each year, at least as of 1996 accounting, according to Warner Chappell and a Forbes magazine article. Claim: The song "Happy Birthday to You" is protected by copyright. Status: True.
Origins: "Happy Birthday to You" is by far the most well-known song in the English-speaking world, and perhaps the whole world, too. For nearly a century, this simple ditty has been the traditional piece of music sung to millions of birthday celebrants every year — everyone from uncomprehending infants to U.S. presidents; it has been performed in space; and it has been incorporated into untold millions of music boxes, watches, musical greeting cards, and other tuneful products. It therefore surprises many to discover that this ubiquitous song, a six-note melody composed in the 19th century and accompanied by a six-word set of repetitive lyrics, is still protected by copyright — and will be for decades to come.
The "Happy Birthday" story begins with two sisters from Kentucky, Mildred J. Hill and Patty Smith Hill. Patty Smith Hill, born in 1868, was a nursery school and kindergarten teacher and an influential educator who developed the "Patty Hill blocks" used in schools nationwide, served on the faculty of the Columbia University Teachers College for thirty years, and helped found the Institute of Child Welfare Research at Columbia in 1924. Patty's older sister, Mildred, born in 1859, started out as a kindergarten and Sunday-school teacher like her sister, but her career path took a musical turn, and Mildred became an composer, organist, concert pianist, and a musical scholar with an speciality in the field of Negro spirituals. One day in 1893, while Mildred was teaching at the Louisville Experimental Kindergarten School where her sister served as principal, she came up with the modest melody we now know as "Happy Birthday"; sister Patty added some simple lyrics and completed the creation of "Good Morning to All," a simple greeting song for teachers to use in welcoming students to class each day:
Good morning to you, Good morning to you, Good morning, dear children, Good morning to all. The Hills' catchy little tune was unleashed upon the world in 1893, when it was published in the songbook Song Stories for the Kindergarten. (The composition of "Good Morning to All" is often erroneously reported as having occurred in 1859 by sources that confuse Mildred Hill's birth date with the year she created the melody.) After the song proved more popular as a serenade for students to sing to their teachers (rather than vice-versa), it evolved into a version with the word "teacher" replacing "children" and a final line matching the first two, and "Good Morning to All" became more popularly known as "Good Morning to You." (Ironically, in light of the copyright battles to come, "Good Morning to All" bore more than a passing resemblance to the songs "Happy Greetings to All" and "Good Night to You All," both published in 1858.)
Here the trail becomes murky -- nobody really knows who wrote the words to "Happy Birthday to You" and put them to the Hills' melody, or when it happened. The "Happy Birthday to You" lyrics first appeared in a songbook edited by one Robert H. Coleman in March of 1924, where they were published as a second stanza to "Good Morning to You"; with the advent of radio and sound films, "Happy Birthday" was widely popularized as a birthday celebration song, and its lyrics supplanted the originals. By the mid-1930s, the revamped ditty had appeared in the Broadway musical The Band Wagon (1931) and had been used for Western Union's first "singing telegram" (1933), and when Irving Berlin's musical As Thousands Cheer made yet another uncredited and uncompensated use of the "Good Morning to All" melody, Jessica Hill, a third Hill sister who administered the copyright to "Good Morning to All" on behalf of her sisters, sprang into action and filed suit. By demonstrating the undeniable similiarities between "Good Morning to All" and "Happy Birthday to You" in court, Jessica was able to secure the copyright of "Happy Birthday to You" for her sisters in 1934 (too late, unfortunately, to benefit Mildred, who had died in 1916).
The Chicago-based music publisher Clayton F. Summy Company, working with Jessica Hill, published and copyrighted "Happy Birthday" in 1935. Under the laws in effect at the time, the Hills' copyright would have expired after one 28-year term and a renewal of similar length, falling into public domain by 1991. However, the Copyright Act of 1976 extended the term of copyright protection to 75 years from date of publication, and the Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998 added another 20 years, so under current law the copyright protection of "Happy Birthday" will remain intact until at least 2030.
Does this mean that everyone who warbles "Happy Birthday to You" to family members at birthday parties is engaging in copyright infringement if they fail to obtain permission from or pay royalties to the song's publisher? No. Royalties are due, of course, for commercial uses of the song, such as playing or singing it for profit, using it in movies, television programs, and stage shows, or incorporating it into musical products such as watches and greeting cards; as well, royalties are due for public performance, defined by copyright law as performances which occur "at a place open to the public, or at any place where a substantial number of persons outside of a normal circle of a family and its social acquaintances is gathered." So, crooning "Happy Birthday to You" to family members and friends at home is fine, but performing a copyrighted work in a public setting such as a restaurant or a sports arena technically requires a license from ASCAP or the Harry Fox Agency (although such infringements are rarely prosecuted).
A common rumor holds that Paul McCartney owns the publishing rights to "Happy Birthday to You," but that rumor is false. Although Paul McCartney did buy up many song catalogs after seeing the publishing rights to most of his Beatles songs slip away in a series of bad business deals (his MPL Communications is now one of the world's largest privately-owned music publishing firms and controls the rights to the Buddy Holly catalog, among others), he does not own (and never has owned) the publishing rights to "Happy Birthday to You." (In yet another bit of irony, Michael Jackson, who was introduced to the benefits of song ownership by Paul McCartney himself, eventually outbid the former Beatle for the publishing rights to the Lennon-McCartney catalog.)
Who does own the publishing rights to "Happy Birthday to You"? They were acquired by a New York accountant named John F. Sengstack when he bought the Clayton F. Summy Company in the 1930s; Sengstack eventually relocated the company to New Jersey and renamed it Birch Tree Ltd. in the 1970s. Warner Chappell (a Warner Communications division), the largest music publisher in the world, purchased Birch Tree Ltd. in late 1998 for a reported sale price of $25 million; the company then became Summy-Birchard Music, now a part of the giant AOL Time Warner media conglomerate. According to David Sengstack, president of Summy-Birchard, "Happy Birthday to You" brings in about $2 million in royalties annually, with the proceeds split between Summy-Birchard and the Hill Foundation. (Both Hill sisters died unmarried and childless, so the Hill Foundation's share of the royalties have presumably been going to charity or to nephew Archibald Hill ever since Patty Hill passed away in 1946.)
As writer Bruce Anderson noted in "Beyond Measure," his excellent article on the "Happy Birthday" phenomenon:
The next time you hear "Happy Birthday" in a movie — and now that you’re listening, it won’t be long — stay for the credits at the end of the movie. Think about how Hollywood would love the story of the Hill sisters, two Southern kindergarten teachers who write a song that they only hope will be a useful teacher’s aid. Instead, the song is a hit that never goes away. It is sung hundreds of millions of times each year, a musical juggernaut that tops the efforts of Tin Pan Alley’s best. Appropriately, then, film credits are the one place left where Mildred and Patty Hill still get their due.
#1 Hits on your birthday throughout the past:
1975 US #1 BeeGees Jive Talking 1976 US #1 Elton John & Kiki Dee Don't Go Breaking My Heart 1977 US #1 Best of My Love The Emotions 1978 US #1 Three Times A Lady The Commodores 1979 US #1 Good Times Chic 1980 US #1 Magic Olivia Newton John 1981 US #1 Endless Love Diana Ross & Lionel Ritchie 1982 US #1 Eye of the Tiger Survivor 1983 US #1 Every Breath You Take The Police 1984 US #1 Ghostbusters Ray Parker Jr. 1985 US #1 Shout Tears For Fears 1986 US #1 Papa Don't Preach Madonna 1987 US #1 LaBamba Los Lobos 1988 US #1 Roll With It Steve Winwood 1989 US #1 Right Here Waiting Richard Marx 1990 US #1 Vision of Love Mariah Carey 1991 US #1 (Everything I Do) I Do It For You Bryan Adams 1992 US #1 End of the Road Boyz II Men 1993 US #1 Can't Help Falling In Love UB40 1994 US #1 Stay(I Missed You) Lisa Loeb 1995 US #1 Waterfalls TLC 1996 US #1 Macarena Los Del Rio 1997 US #1 I'll Be Missing You Puff Daddy & Faith Evans 1998 US #1 The Boy Is Mine Brandy & Monica 1999 US #1 Genie In A Bottle Christina Aguilera 2000 US #1 Doesn't Really Matter Janet Jackson 2001 US #1 Fallin' Alicia Keys 2002 US #1 Dilemma Nelly & Kelly Rowland
If you'd like to see what was #1 on your birthday, check out:
http://www.thisdayinmusic.com/cont/choose.html |
Arthen |
Posted - 08/21/2003 : 12:03:18 AM Again, it's still the 20th in my time zone! Happy Birthday, hope you had a good one, and the next year of your life rules! |
Jay |
Posted - 08/20/2003 : 7:44:07 PM Happy Birth...dee... |
therippa |
Posted - 08/20/2003 : 12:25:51 PM Happy Birthday Sorrel! |
{=HTG=} |
Posted - 08/20/2003 : 03:05:56 AM Happy Birthday |
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