Ha Ha Ha

Ha Ha Ha is the sound of laughter.

Ha Ha Ha may also refer to:

Film

  • Ha! Ha! Ha! (1934 film), a Betty Boop animated short
  • Hahaha (film), a 2010 South Korean film
  • Music

  • Ha!-Ha!-Ha!, a 1977 album by British pop group Ultravox
  • Ha Ha Ha (album), a 2012 album by Australian singer-songwriter Natalie Gauci
  • See also

  • Haha (disambiguation)
  • Ha!-Ha!-Ha!

    Ha!-Ha!-Ha! was the second album by British pop group Ultravox, at that time known as "Ultravox!", with an exclamation mark, as a nod to Neu!. Although the group would later achieve fame and commercial success with lead singer Midge Ure the band was, in 1977, led by singer/songwriter John Foxx who was accompanied by guitarist Stevie Shears, drummer Warren Cann, bassist Chris Cross and keyboard/violinist Billy Currie.

    Ha!-Ha!-Ha! was released on 14 October 1977, and was accompanied by lead single "ROckwrok" backed with "Hiroshima Mon Amour", which was released eleven days earlier. Neither reached the pop charts, although Island Records continued to have faith in the band. As a consequence of the album's confusing typography – it is variously known as Ha!-Ha!-Ha!, Ha! Ha! Ha! and -ha!-ha!-ha!, the group decided to abandon their exclamation mark for subsequent releases.

    Whilst the group's first album had been a product of the David Bowie/Roxy Music-esque side of glam rock, their second was considerably more informed by the burgeoning punk movement, although it also marked the group's first widespread adoption of synthesisers and electronic production techniques. Money from the first album was used to improve the band's equipment, and funded the purchase of an ARP Odyssey and, most notably, a Roland TR-77 drum machine, which appeared on the album's final track, "Hiroshima Mon Amour". This song was the most indicative of the group's later synth-pop direction, and remains both a fan and critical favourite. It was performed on the group's 1978 Old Grey Whistle Test appearance and was covered by The Church on their 1999 covers album A Box of Birds and also by Jan Linton.

    Ha! Ha! Ha! (1934 film)

    Ha! Ha! Ha! is a 1934 Fleischer Studio animated short film starring Betty Boop, and featuring Koko the Clown.

    Synopsis

    Max Fleischer draws Betty, then leaves her for the night in the studio. Koko escapes from the inkwell and helps himself to a candy bar left behind by Max. He starts to eat some of it but soon gets a terrible toothache. Betty tries to perform some amateur dentistry on Koko, by trying to yank the bad tooth out while dancing. After this fails, she attempts to calm him down but uses too much laughing gas, causing Betty and Koko to laugh hysterically. The laughing gas spreads the room, making a cuckoo clock and a typewriter laugh hysterically. The laughing gas then goes out the window and spreads into town. Both people and inanimate objects begin laughing hysterically, including a mailbox, a parking meter, a bridge, cars and graves. The short ends when Betty and Koko get back in the inkwell and it begins laughing, before panting.

    Production notes

    This is a partial remake of the 1924 Koko animated short, The Cure. It was also Koko's last theatrical appearance.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Ha, Ha

    by: T.c. Matic

    Give me power
    De la force
    Hey, hey black pearl
    Hey, hey eastern lady
    Coloured skin
    Coloured skin
    HaHa Ha hahahaha
    HaHa Ha hahahaha
    HaHa Ha hahahaha
    HaHa Ha hahahaha
    L'esprit d'un con
    L'esprit d'un cassanova
    Mamma mia
    Mamma mia
    Donne-moi ta main
    Donne-moi du pain
    A demain Julien
    A demain Julien
    HaHa Ha hahahaha
    HaHa Ha hahahaha
    HaHa Ha hahahaha
    HaHa Ha hahahaha
    Comment ça va Martha
    Any place is everywhere
    Truths and lies
    Shut up, shut up
    You're talking too loud
    Shut up, shut up
    You're talking too loud
    HaHa Ha hahahaha
    HaHa Ha hahahaha
    HaHa Ha hahahaha
    HaHa Ha hahahaha
    Cheek to cheek
    Body to body
    A distance between two points
    A distance between two points
    Give me power
    Give me power
    Give me power
    Give me power
    HaHa Ha hahahaha
    HaHa Ha hahahaha
    HaHa Ha hahahaha
    HaHa Ha hahahaha




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