![x gon give it to ya meme x gon give it to ya meme](https://pics.esmemes.com/xgon-give-it-to-ya-makeameme-org-x-gon-give-it-52845229.png)
“Who” has a gimmick that Cicierega has used on each of his albums: each of the songs featured relates to one specific word, this one being "who." Featuring songs from 10 artists, including The Who, Men at Work, Blur, the Baha Men, Selena Gomez, and even the Who’s That Pokemon theme, “Who” masterfully takes bits and pieces from each song and turns it into a bouncy electro-pop jam. Beyond his videos, he also makes music such as “Two Trucks” and “Touch-Tone Telephone” under the name Lemon Demon, as well as incredibly well-produced meme mashup albums. Perhaps one of the longest-lasting and consistent content creators in Internet history, Cicierega is the mind behind dozens of beloved viral videos over the span of two decades like “Potter Puppet Pals,” “Ariel Needs Legs,” “Bustin,” and so many more. “Drowning Pool - Bodies but it’s the ‘Drake and Josh’ Theme Song” by William MaranciĪ list of meme song mashups is incomplete without mentioning Neil Cicierega.
![x gon give it to ya meme x gon give it to ya meme](https://i.imgur.com/OOvi1qG.jpg)
Whether or not you think these songs accomplish that is up to you, but here are ten music mashups that work far better than they have any right to. Most of those mashups are rightfully terrible, but some mashup artists have created song abominations that somehow swing around from “so bad, it’s good” to just plain good.
![x gon give it to ya meme x gon give it to ya meme](https://i.redd.it/h6plkv92i5q11.jpg)
Most music mashups on the Internet feature songs that the mashup creator thinks would work together in some way, whether they have a similar mood, sound, topic, etc.īut, this is the Internet we are talking about, and with the rise of meme culture came a simultaneous rise of people trying to combine songs they explicitly think shouldn’t work together. A popular form of remixing music online are mashups: taking two or more songs and combining them into one brand new song. While song remixes have existed for a long time, the invention of the Internet opened the doors of remixing music to a much wider audience than before.