The song you’re referring to is "Shave and a Haircut," a traditional musical phrase often used as a playful signature tune. It is commonly associated with a two-beat rhythm followed by a distinctive "two bits" phrase. This catchy jingle has appeared in various forms of media and is frequently used for comedic effect. The phrase itself is often completed with a rhythmic knock or clap.
I think you mean "two bits" like the litte song, "Shave and a haircut, two bits." Two bits is a quarter, twenty five cents.
two eights make one quarter so it takes threes times as many to make three quarters. So, 6 eights make three quarters. ( A eighth of a dollar is called a bit so 2 bits is a quarter and 6 bits is 75 cents. There is an old song that ends with "Shave and a haircut - six bits.)
Bits in slanted Are bits other people singingWORKING ON ANSWER!
the song get a haircut was madee in 1993
Two bits. It refers to two pie-shaped eighths, or 'bits', of a silver dollar that was usually cut on a dollar cutting machine (banks had them) mainly used in the old west before they had nickels, dimes, and quarters to make change and buy goods. The guy asks the bartender, "How much for a shot of whiskey?" .... "Two bits." answers the bartender. The guy throws down two pie-shaped eighths of a silver dollar. Also the song 'jingle' "Shave and a haircut, two bits" refers to these same pieces of silver. You might note that the New York Stock Exchange still trades in eighths of a dollar even though no 12.5 cent coin was ever minted. The American Stock Exchange trades in tenths.
The Haircut Song by Ray Stevens
that you need to shave your hairy bum
It's a song called "Collide" by Howie Day.
willy
http://www.myspace.com/calvinharristv Acceptable in the 80s
Sheer.K - Random Fiction Xperience
queen..classic song dude