Vasoline - Stone Temple Pilots | Karaoke Version | KaraFun

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 3 ต.ค. 2024
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    ℹ️ This version contains a low volume vocal guide to help you learn the song. The karaoke version without the vocal guide is available on www.karafun.com. This recording is a cover of Vasoline as made famous by Stone Temple Pilots. This version is not the original version, and is not performed by Stone Temple Pilots. This instrumental/playback version contains a vocal guide, the lyrics and backing vocals.
    All the assets on KaraFun channels are used by permission under licensing agreement with rights holders (music composition, sound re-recording).
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ความคิดเห็น • 18

  • @echase416
    @echase416 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Loved it when he sang this on Letterman in 1994.

    • @jamesmicucci7028
      @jamesmicucci7028 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      It's up here on YT, just watched it. Great version, Scott sounds fantastic, looks healthy, more meat on his bones than later. Was pre-emptied on the original CBS broadcast by the 'OJ Simpson running from the law in the Bronco' story.

  • @moltkes1594
    @moltkes1594 8 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    I really love to sing this song.

  • @MrLeoben2
    @MrLeoben2 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Easy peasy go to song at a karaoke party.

  • @Wayne_Robinson
    @Wayne_Robinson 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    The plural of "fly" is "flies" but thanks for the video nonetheless. It's fine for my purposes!

  • @boyb72
    @boyb72 5 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Rest in peace scott!!

  • @BlazeTheIce
    @BlazeTheIce 7 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Why do only some of the band have middle names in the beginning?

    • @erf1109
      @erf1109 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Artists choose how they want their names displayed in credits. Services like BMI require you to register your artist name with them in USA so that you can be properly credited with your work. I'm not saying that the names in the beginning are correct to the licensing information but just wanted to give you info that it SHOULD be based on actual licensing information. Some artists use their full names, an abbreviation of some sort, or an artist name (e.g. "Lil' Big Chewie").

  • @wlangley88
    @wlangley88 8 ปีที่แล้ว

    @5

  • @christiangarcia3523
    @christiangarcia3523 7 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    nobody has unglued karaoke wtf !!!!

    • @acecola8295
      @acecola8295 6 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      That song is awesome! Why doe NOONE seem to have it!?

  • @MundoGamesDo
    @MundoGamesDo 6 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Why do their music talks a lot of lies?

    • @derekbaker3279
      @derekbaker3279 6 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Hi Vinivius. Here is how I understand their lyrics (my apologies for posting a lengthy answer, but im my humble opinion, there is a lot to understand):
      I will begin by mentioning a few key paradigms about interpreting lyrics: First, many artists' lyrics have two or three 'levels' of meaning. Second, not all song lyrics should be taken literally, and in many cases a word or phrase may have a 'double meaning'. Third, artists are very adept at stepping outside of their own perspective & writing from the perspective of another specific individual, or an object, or an event, or from someone completely outside of the situation that the song describes. With all of these in mind, here's my best attempt at an answer to your question:
      It is important to know that STP's lead singer & lyricist (Scott Weiland, Oct.27, 1967 - Dec.3, 2015) was a junkie who had a terrible time fighting his addiction to drugs (especially heroin). A lot of his songs are about his battles with his addiction, especially when he had completed therapy & detox, then 'fell off the wagon' & started using them again. In a sense, he wrote about his relationship with various drugs as if he was in a romantic relationship a drug & could never leave it forever. So, Weiland's lyrics often represented him talking to the drugs, or sometimes the lyrics represent the drugs talking to him. [very much like the great Depeche Mode song "Never Let Me Down (Again)"]. I am sure that some of his songs also were about substance abuse by other members of the band.
      So why so much about "lies"? Well, since Weiland knew that his addiction(s) were slowly killing him & that drugs do not represent what they first appear to be, Weiland's words often accused the drugs of being liars. Also, like many artists, Weiland was fully aware of the hypocrisies in society (for example, the images promoted by the media, the rhetoric of politicians, peer pressure from friends, etc), so he believed that a lot of modern society is based on peoples' incorrect assumptions & the lies people hear. Furthermore, Weiland also had his share of relationship problems, and he must have been lied to by lovers, friends, bandmates, etc
      What about this song? In "Vasoline", I have a hunch that Weiland was talking about how he & others are incapable of resisting temptations, including drugs. FYI, vasoline is a substance made from petroleum chemicals. It was invented for helpful medical uses, but it was/is also used for dissolving certain narcotics. Also, vasoline is a sticky substance with an odour that attracts insects & they get stuck on it...so vasoline is like an insect trap too. So, for Weiland, vasoline & flies were metaphors for liars & victims of lying.
      BTW, I should mention that during the 20th & 21st century, there have been many songs about alcohol/drugs written by blues, jazz, folk, country, and rock artists that the media & public assumed were promoting the use of drugs & telling people that drugs were fun. Sometimes the songs were doing that, but often the lyricists were just writing about the substance (and how it affected their lives) without promoting its use. Many artists were writing about their dependence on alcohol/drugs & how it got them into trouble, etc., so they were indirectly warning their fellow musicians, fans, and the public about how dangerous they could be. A good example is "Cocaine", which was written by J.J. Cale and made famous by Eric Clapton (both songwriters/guitarists were junkies that were lucky enough to overcome their addictions). I have seen Eric Clapton in concert twice, and in both cases, when the song "Cocaine" was played, you could tell that the audience thought the song was celebrating how fun cocaine is. Unfortunately, those people should have listened to the original recording by J.J. Cale, because they would understand that the song is NOT pro-cocaine...instead, it's a very frank discussion of how "she" (the drug) does not deceive people. In other words, J.J. Cale's lyrics are saying that if the drug is like a person, then it does not lie. J.J. Cale was telling everyone that the drug cocaine is exactly what people say it is, so nobody should fool themselves into thinking it's harmless.]
      Back to the original topic...so, IMHO, "Vasoline" is NOT a positive message about heroin or any other 'hard drugs'. It's a sign that Weiland believed that drugs seduce people into using them, and it uses temptation & lies to do fool people.
      I hope my guesses have been helpful. :)

    • @acecola8295
      @acecola8295 5 ปีที่แล้ว

      pretty sure the lies line is a reference to his then girlfriend Janina Casteneda (hope I spelled that right) and how he'd lie to her constantly about his drug use, but she knew he was lying

  • @Menyhard
    @Menyhard 6 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Not karaoke

    • @chrissouthall411
      @chrissouthall411 5 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Well... it is

    • @timothygunter
      @timothygunter ปีที่แล้ว

      Sang Plush at a country bar. I didn't get kicked out!