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orange peel moses

"Under the Eclipse" Release Recap

"Under the Eclipse" Release Recap

Those of you who weren't able to attend my “Under the Eclipse” music release party last Thursday have been asking how it went. Because I refuse to oversimplify such a significant life event – and it was too overwhelming to answer everyone individually – I'll attempt to paint a picture below :)

Invisible City's Clubhouse headquarters hosted the release. Located in a charming old factory in the heart of Denver's Santa Fe Arts District, the IC Clubhouse is a bohemian abode decorated with large plants, treasures from around the globe and salon style seating. Navel oranges brightened the space for the night and copies of my career-encapsulating recent Denver Westword feature were on hand. Friends and family filtered in as DJ Ginger Perry dropped ear worms from Stevie Nicks, Bowie, Qveen Herby and more. Reunions transpired and hugs were shared. Fancy cocktails were imbibed and laughter permeated the room. My dad told his favorite singing telegram story ad nauseam. ‘Twas a vibe.

The evening culminated with a music trio performance featuring vocalist Lex Alvis, guitarist Andy Babb and yours truly. Lex and I – LexaPeel for short – prepared a three-song set of comedy country covers involving costume changes, props and humorous banter. Little did we know that the first number, an innuendo-laden ditty from the mockumentary Walk Hard, soundtracked my step-brother Woody's proposal to his wife Mackenzie. And they were both present, likely delighted by the synchronicity of seeing people close to them performing a tune carrying such special significance. It wouldn't be the end of making people feel special.

Birthday grams are a singing telegram artist's bread and butter. And this telegram artist knows a dozen or more birthday numbers. But none are quite like “Birthday Medicine,” the tune we're releasing Friday, April 19 at my Archipelago-hosted Unbirthday Party and 20th “Singaversary” - 20 years of singing telegram deliveries. With Lex's birthday on the horizon, it was only fitting that we performed a rendition of it in her honor. I lit the candle protruding from a Scotcheroo treat Lex had concocted herself, and we waltzed our way through the medicine circle-originating birthday meditation. You're a gift to this earth. Bless the day of your birth. The most recognized song in the English language — “Happy Birthday” — can't hold a candle to “Birthday Medicine.”

The moment of truth had arrived. While Lex helped me into an orange fur coat, I shared the origin story of “Under the Eclipse” with those in attendance. Yes, there was a Craigslist ad involved. And no one really knows whether the ad author fathered an eclipse baby with a stranger he met on the classified ads site. Some speculate that he was a internet prankster instead. Either way, the mystery author probably doesn't realize someone wrote a song about his banana nuts personal ad yet. A song that Andy, Lex and I dutifully played for the devoted friends and family who'd come out to support us that night. The song culminated with a singalong. Gimme your lips. Gimme your hips. Under the eclipse.

Keep your eyes peeled for the Rocco Tortorella-edited music video, featuring footage from Brad Bingham, Thor Wixom and Rocco himself :)

Image: Daniel McEnrue Photography
Wardrobe Support: Shannon Ryan
Event & Sound Support: Debjit
Artwork: OjerOmyO

Best for Colorado

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Best for Colorado

Best for Colorado is a statewide initiative founded and spearheaded by the B Corp movement to bring together a coalition of businesses, nonprofits and government groups to encourage and empower all Colorado companies to be the best for Colorado’s workers, communities and the environment. Launched in June 2017 at The Governor’s Mansion, the landmark program invited 500 Colorado companies to complete the Best for Colorado Challenge. Best for Colorado enlisted Custom Singing Telegrams to concoct a theme song for the program launch. CST owner Orange Peel Moses penned a derivative of Bachman-Turner Overdrive’s “Takin’ Care of Business” for the occasion - see lyrics below :)

Jobs that are worthy of this state
let's create 'em, make 'em great
Build and strengthen our communities

Colorado deserves it,

Colorado, let's preserve its
environmental integrity

Challenges, they are a facing
Colorado's population
Business can address 'em head on, it's true

Business practice improvement
let's support leaders who do it
and encourage others to follow suit



Taking care of business (every day)
Taking care of business (every way)

taking care of business (that is right)

Taking care of business and working overtime

Work out

What's your company's impact?
take the challenge, get the facts
you can do it all on our website

Any company can do it
any biz can join the movement
doesn't matter its sector or size

80 B Corps in this state
B Corps are leading the way
using business as a positive force

it is time to get to work
Build, recruit, support, mentor
Then next year, we'll give out some awards

Best for Colorado

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Neighborhood Builders

Neighborhood Builders

Neighborhood Builders is a Bank of America program that awards financial aid to deserving nonprofits. Denver’s Prodigy Coffeehouse was chosen to receive a $200K Neighborhood Builders grant in 2021. Bank of America enlisted Custom Singing Telegrams to break the incredible news. CST owner Orange Peel Moses penned a derivative of Queen’s iconic “We Are the Champions” to communicate the one-of-a-kind announcement - see lyrics below :)

At Prodigy, coffee is served
by young adults
from Northeast Denver

Kind staff on hand to show them the ropes
Youth building skills, confidence and wellness
Filled with dreams and hopes

Neighborhood Builders, you are
And we want to help you go so far
Neighborhood Builders
Neighborhood Builders
Congratulations, here's a check for 200K

Image: Giorgio Trovato / Unsplash

Baby Sloffee (Grateful Dead Derivative)

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Baby Sloffee (Grateful Dead Derivative)

At a bluegrass fest, that is where we met
You were drunk and lost and also alone
You were in distress, like a shit-faced damsel
I rescued you and now look where we are

To Pigskin, I gave in, winning isn't so bad
Down dog style, I got you to try it
Speaking of pups, when Hobo went missing
We trekked for miles, and three solid days

Happy anniversary
We are checking things off
Our rain check list

Quarantine with you hasn't been that bad boo
We can lamp all day and all through the night
You are cuter than a baby sloth, you
took me to a donkey sanctuary

We have off-roaded, at the Top of the World
A Trumper we call “Come on” helped us up
Florida, New Orleans and Alabama
Iron Bull football, survived a blizzard too

Maybe one day, we'll have a threesome
with the gal who barbecues at Rancho
And I'll write a book of rednecky things you say
'It duttin' matter, I like 'em skinny'

La dee da da da,
We go where we go
Da da da, da da, da da da da da

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Voila! It Was You

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Voila! It Was You

In nearly twenty of years of delivering singing telegrams, I've performed for thousands of recipients. And I’ve composed personalized lyrics for many, including recent customer-turned-recipient Jimmie Brown (below). Jimmie is the first recipient to wax poetic about her point-of-view experience. Behold her French-infused “Voila! It Was You” :)

You slipped in the door, I hadn’t a clue
And then when I turned — voila! it was you
With guitar and grin and jaunty beret
It’s Monsieur l’Orange, all ready to play
I sat open-jawed, with my mouth all askew
As my family high-fived at their big birthday coup

Your French serenade was la creme de la creme
With random French phrases adroitly tossed in
You strummed and you sang with gusto and mirth
And led in the toast to the day of my birth
Complete with my very own “La Vie en Rose”
With personal lyrics that you had composed

The whole celebration was tres magnifique
Pulled off with aplomb and with nary a squeak
(With one small exception and narrow escape
when 85 candles ignited the cake)
So merci beaucoup to the whole sneaky crew
My fabulous family and fabulous you

Zheemie aka Jimmie Brown

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The Wedding Singer

The Wedding Singer

Megan is one of Custom Singing Telegrams' most prominent repeat customers. She has sent birthday grams to friends and family members for about seven years. When she got married in Golden, CO recently, her sister decided it was time for payback. So I donned a wedding dress and sauntered into the wedding reception. Realizing quickly what was in store, Megan started laughing from the moment she saw me crossing the room toward her and her new husband's table. The DJ handed me a wireless mic and I asked the bride if she wanted to tell the attendees who the wedding crasher was. She was still laughing too hard to answer the question. Her husband explained that Megan loved hiring me to surprise people on their birthdays.

Then something magic happened. I've been performing “Grow Old with You,” a tune sung by Adam Sandler's character in the movie The Wedding Singer, for over a decade now. It's a funny, endearing tune, but most people don't know the lyrics. On this occasion, it sounded like half the wedding guests were familiar with the words, and were raising their voices along with me. It was incredible.

Images: Thin Threads

RUFUS DU SOL (Acoustic)

RUFUS DU SOL (Acoustic)

With RUFUS DU SOL set to headline two nights at Colorado's legendary Red Rocks Amphitheater this weekend, interest is understandably high. I've been a casual fan for years and saw them once in Costa Rica, but it wasn't until recently - inspired by a new friend (you know who you are) - that I began learning several of their tunes on guitar and ukulele. Here's an acoustic rendition of "Innerbloom" that I recorded this morning at Archipelago Clubs:)

What Does the Fox Say?

What Does the Fox Say?

Scott Happel produces a variety show called Carnivale de Sensuale. Chelsea aka Claire Voyant is the cast's resident magician. In the spring of 2018, the big opening number was soundtracked by comedy music act Ylvis's novelty hit “What Does the Fox Say.” Scott asked Chelsea to dress up as the fox and perform all the crazy / weird hypothetical fox sounds in the song. Recently, Chelsea celebrated her birthday at a Denver speakeasy. In lieu of an easily accessible fox fit, Happel enlisted me to perform the Ylvis ditty - as the Grim Reaper - ridiculous noises and all. The musical callback had Chelsea on the verge of tears.

Carnivale de Sensuale is celebrating its tenth anniversary in mid-October at The Oriental Theater - RSVP here.

Vaccine Champions

Vaccine Champions

(to the tune of “We Are the Champions” as recorded by Queen)

The pandemic arrived
it changed our lives
Webex and masks
No more hugs goodbye

Thought it’d last just weeks
but dragged on for months
we monitored our trend lines for some hope
finally got some

It took four champions, Val’s one
Jo Ree, Melissa and Adam
(to create a) best practice vaccine
at Sky Ridge, you see
They begged and borrowed
from near and from far, oh
Raised the bar

A mere thank you
that wouldn’t do
enlisted a pro
to truly show you

We truly thank you
We know it was rough
But you shined bright like the stars that you are
And made us proud of…

You, you’re the champions, my friends
And you’ll vaccinate til Covid ends
You are the champions, you are the champions
At best practice vaccines,
yes, you are the champions
of Sky Ridge

2020 Hindsight: Practicing Gratitude

2020 Hindsight: Practicing Gratitude

Bill Gates may have seen it coming, but 2020 was a curveball for most. Sincere condolences to everyone who lost loved ones to Covid. Countless small businesses were impacted, including my own Denver singing telegram agency. In-person telegram deliveries were temporarily deemed non-essential during our spring stay-at-home order, even though I could technically perform zero-contact, socially distanced versions. I did quickly begin offering virtual deliveries via Zoom, but, for some customers, virtual serenades weren't an adequate substitute for the live action experience. When the initial order was relaxed, business began to pick up. While I empathize immensely with small businesses who weren't as fortunate, the month following stay-at-home was one of the busiest of my nearly seventeen year career. Customers utilized our services seventy times to celebrate quarantine birthdays, Mother's Day, graduations and other special occasions in unique ways. Singing telegram performers are apparently essential workers after all.

This year obviously wasn't all unicorns and butterflies – though, pre-pandemic, I did perform my stilt unicorn at Colorado winter resorts and visit a Mexican butterfly sanctuary – but there's a growing body of evidence that practicing gratitude improves general well-being, increases resilience, strengthens social relationships and reduces stress and depression. Giving thanks can also strengthen your immune system, which has rarely been more important. So while I'm certainly sensitive to everyone and everything we've lost, I'd like to accentuate the positives. Below are a few of the things I've been #blessed to experience this year.

Released Butterflies EP on Spotify & other digital music platforms

Learned how to surf in Costa Rica (pre-pandemic)

Played singing cupid on Valentine’s Day for the sixteenth consecutive year

Began conscious breathwork practice with Claudia Amarsi

Skydived out of my first airplane

Stewarded my singing telegram business through a pandemic

Successfully completed Deepak Chopra 30-day meditation challenge

Finished writing & started recording my Craigslist-inspired tune “Under the Eclipse” with a Denver music producer (working with a voice coach along the way)

Took the cold plunge - began hot and cold therapy practice, having long ago been inspired by Tom Robbins’ novel Jitterbug Perfume

Appeared on Colorado Springs TV program in conjunction with Valentine’s Day

Rang in New Year’s Eve at uber-magical Everland gala (pre-pandemic)

Won DGTL Lightning in a Bottle / Grand Artique talent show, with help from Danny Fantastic

Hiked Kenosha Pass amidst changing Aspen leaves

Piloted four-legged stilt zebra in Costa Rica for the third time

Practiced [socially distanced] yoga at Red Rocks & Everland

Sang at my Aunt Pansy’s celebration of life in Indiana

Was featured on VoyageDenver.com

Summited a 14er (14,000 foot peak) called Quandary with Archipelago Clubs

Sang on LA’s legendary KROQ radio station via video chat

Was transformed into the Grinch for a day by Melinda Wolfe

Danced on stilts at Circus Collective’s Black Lives Matter fundraiser

Began learning Argentinian tango

Wrote & performed a personalized bday gram - with accompaniment from Melissa Ivey - for the son of a prominent Colorado music industry exec

Studied racism, North American history, fascism, sleep, the Vagus nerve & more

Animated four-legged stilt unicorn at Colorado winter resorts with Smitten Kitten

Embodied the Headless Horseman at Denver Botanic Gardens

Sang at first ever virtual Burning Man

Attended a handful of Covid-safe events, including Acoma Street Project, Crush Walls, Marc Rebillet’s drive-in theater show & Rainbow Militia’s Gnome Away from Home

Was rendered speechless by a Monarch butterfly sanctuary in Michoacan, Mexico (pre-pandemic)

Image: Jonathan Shoup
Makeup: Miriam Andolini

Death in Estes Park

Death in Estes Park

Estes Park played a pivotal role in my origin story. I was reminded of the Colorado mountain town's part in my unconventional career last week when a singing telegram customer enlisted me to play Grim Reaper for a fiftieth birthday there. Because I don't get booked there often, I couldn't resist telling her about my history with the place.

When I was fourteen, I attended a Methodist youth retreat in Estes called Up With Youth. An annual talent show was part of the event. One of that year's participants was a fellow fourteen year-old named Kent Lambert. Lambert sang an original song, accompanying himself on the piano. I had an epiphany of sorts during his performance. I’d been studying music since I was four or five. And I was an adept writer who’d dabbled in poetry. Songwriting was basically fusing the two arts. Growing up in a small town, I had never personally known a songwriter before. But I had just witnessed someone my own age perform a tune he'd concocted himself. If he could do it, I rationalized, then I could too. And two years later, I followed in his footsteps, accompanying my rudimentary original song with acoustic guitar. I probably wasn't very good yet, but the thrill was palpable. Plus, I played a Nirvana song in a cabin and one girl said, “If we weren’t at a church camp right now, I’d sleep with you.”

After relaying this anecdote to the customer (minus the Nirvana part), I suggested that writing personalized lyrics would be a phenomenal addition to the planned set list. She was all about it. I utilized the intel she compiled to pen a spoof of The Grateful Dead's “Ripple” for the Deadhead I was about to serenade. And it absolutely killed – pun intended. The dinner party, seated at a balcony table which overlooked the lake, enjoyed the show so much that they invited me to sit down for the remainder of the meal. Later, I popped over to the Stephen King-inspiring Stanley Hotel for some Reaper selfies and a spontaneous bannister slide in front of a ghost tour group.

Sample parody song lyrics:

What were you wearing the first time you met her?
She'll tell you, a memory like an elephant
If you are her pal, you might have a tchotchke
Phoebe from Friends is basically her twin

She's the best wing gal, if there's someone you're into
She will nudge you indiscreetly towards them
'Cause you might be shy, but she's got you covered
Matchmaking is one of her many gifts

If there is a cake that's missing its frosting
It's likely Kris just might be the culprit
nightly snack attacks, take the shirt off of her back
But there's no chance of sharing her ice cream

Reaper Image: Michael Hystead

Singing Telegrams: Pandemic Proof

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Singing Telegrams: Pandemic Proof

Colorado's concert industry, like so many others, was shut down by the pandemic in March. Singing telegrams temporarily became the primary live music game in town, though bookings were understandably sparse. Unsurprisingly, requests for virtual telegrams began appearing, and we quickly rose to the challenge, offering virtual performances via video chat platforms such as Zoom and FaceTime. When our state's Stay-at-Home order went into effect, singing telegrams were deemed a non-essential business and prohibited from offering in-person deliveries – despite the possibility of completely contact-free and socially distanced appearances. When Stay-at-Home was relaxed to Safer-at-Home in late April, individual counties slowly began permitting curbside delivery by non-essential businesses, and socially distanced singing telegrams were back in action. By May 8, all Colorado counties were allowing so-called non-essential businesses to make curbside deliveries. And, in the absence of a public live music industry, singing telegrams suddenly became the hottest live music ticket in town.

Mother's Day 2020 was the single busiest mom-honoring holiday in Custom Singing Telegrams' history. To be fair, Mother's Day wasn't the only occasion being celebrated that day. A CU Boulder graduate who once wallpapered her adolescent bedroom with One Direction posters was brought to happy tears by a guitar-wielding, singing unicorn delivering balloons, flowers, candy and a personalized parody of one of the boy band's most flattering ear worms. The grad's family tuned in for the performance via Zoom, then revisited it later via professional video documentation. Several birthdays were enhanced, one in an Englewood cul-de-sac and another on a front porch in the Santa Fe Arts District. The most hilarious Mother's Day gram transpired in Parker, where a grandmother requested that I dress in homage to her still-in-diapers grandkid and serenade her daughter (mom of the grandkid in question). The maternal recipient broke out into laughter upon seeing a diaper and bonnet-clad adult man standing on the walkway leading to the family's front porch. Four out of the nine total telegrams performed that day were virtual, including Zoom-facilitated serenades for recipients in New York and Puerto Rico.

The Boulder unicorn serenade was just the first of a string of graduation surprises. In the absence of physical commencement ceremonies, some families thought outside the box to commemorate their children's achievements. The above-mentioned CU grad wasn't the only subject of a personalized parody song. The decades older Chicago-based sister of a Cherry Creek High grad commissioned a custom parody of Post Malone's “Congratulations” for her younger brother. And the “We Are the Champions” spoof I penned for a Queen-loving grad was a huge hit (see sample lyrics below). Another high school grad – a guitarist studying legendary alt-rock band Nirvana – was treated to an acoustic rendition of “Come As You Are” in his family's yard while his mother captured the show for far-off relatives. It was an emotional experience for both recipient and singer, as I listened to Nirvana when I was his age. One of the most creative pandemic-era celebrations saw a graduate's father set up a Zoom-enabled flatscreen on the family porch for the relatives unable to attend. His red-headed daughter and two of her fellow classmates sat in camping chairs facing the Zoom party, while I performed for both the virtual and physical audiences.

Graduations and Mother's Day were popular occasions for singing telegrams in May, but birthday grams have always been our bread and butter. A Longmont woman's lover traditionally goes to Africa twice a year, but 2020's travel plans were kiboshed by Covid-19. So we brought Africa to him, in the form of a guitar-wielding, Toto-singing zebra. Neighbors out for their daily stroll spontaneously became a socially distanced audience. Since outdoor performances have become the norm in the pandemic era, and people have been spending more time in and around their homes, it's become more and more common to have nearby neighbors applauding in the background. Although not every neighbor has been quite as thrilled with our new normal. One industrious customer penned a Bon Jovi parody called “Quarantine Ain't Fair.” While I was in the middle of rocking the spoof for an apartment resident standing safely inside his unit with the door ajar, his adjacent neighbor suddenly emerged from her apartment exclaiming, “I'm in the middle of a Zoom meeting!” So I “turnt down” and brought the tune home in quieter fashion.

The singing telegram business, like so many others, has been affected by the Coronavirus pandemic. Socially distanced, outdoor performances are the current standard. Singing through a face mask is occasionally required. Virtual versions, ones in which the audience is often muted for the sake of optimal audio (making real-time interaction and two-way laughter impossible), are much more common. Still, it's been fascinating to see the myriad ways that people have continued to celebrate their friends and family in these challenging times – and an honor, as always, to be involved.

”We Are the Champions” Parody:

She's paid her dues
Pulled kids' loose teeth
Kindergarten dentist
Synchronized swimming meets

She's made mistakes
Poor choices in boys
Golf team, she only did it for the 'fits
Still, we're overjoyed

She's graduating, it's true
college in the fall, CSU
She's graduating, she's graduating
She will do great things
'Cause she's graduating, and strong-willed

Frank Sinatra
Was hot in his day
But Frank, he drank Jack
White Claw is her fave

Loved Ceramics class
A fashionista
Traveled a lot, London and Istanbul
Says, 'Bye Felicia'

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Black Music Matters

Black Music Matters

My singing telegram repertoire is immensely indebted to black artists. Singing telegrams rely on either cover songs or song parodies for the majority of their musical messages. While it's entirely possible to run a singing telegram agency that utilizes solely original songs, it's doubtful it would be as successful as one that employs lyrics and melodies familiar to customers and recipients. There are myriad articulate, celebratory, funny, impactful, sexy, thoughtful and uplifting songs already in the world, and melodies hold incredible emotional and nostalgic value for music fans. And there's obviously no denying the impact that black artists have had on popular music and culture. Because I can't afford to stand in physical solidarity with Black Lives Matter protesters right now (my mom is immune-compromised), I thought it was worth reflecting on some of the black artists that my business, Custom Singing Telegrams, would not be the same without.

Birthdays are a singing telegram agency's bread and butter. Black artists are behind two of the most popular birthday numbers we perform: Stevie Wonder's “Happy Birthday” and Grandmaster Flash's “Birthday Party.” It's worth noting that Martin Luther King is the inspiration behind Wonder's tune, but we adapt it for our purposes. And it would be difficult to entertain hip hop music fans – which obviously comprise a massive demographic, one that includes many kids and teenagers – without Grandmaster Flash's birthday rap. Artists like Jeremih, Kool & The Gang, Montell Jordan and Rihanna offer other options for birth anniversary surprises, though Kool & The Gang's “Celebration” is universal enough to work for nearly any occasion.

Valentine's Day is the single busiest day of the year for singing telegrams. Andre 3000, formerly of hip hop duo Outkast, penned a modern Valentine's anthem called “Happy Valentine's Day” that works incredibly well for many performances on February 14. And given that donning a diaper and wings is one of my most hilarious signature moves, I've definitely gotten some mileage out of Sam Cooke's “Cupid.” Bruno Mars' flattering and uplifting “Just The Way You Are” is appropriate for many occasions, but it's certainly a go-to on V-Day.

While birthdays and Valentine's Day are two of the most popular occasions for singing telegrams, our services are enlisted for a plethora of other ones. My rendition of Bobby McFerrin's “Don't Worry, Be Happy” got a cancer-stricken recipient through difficult doctor visits the other day. Similarly, Bob Marley's “Three Little Birds” has offered hope and solace to many recipients in the midst of troubling times or recoveries. Moms have felt love from offspring on Mother's Day via a slightly modified version of Marvin Gaye's “How Sweet It Is.” And Salt N Pepa's “Push It” absolutely slays at baby showers.

As I implied above, I support the Black Lives Matter movement and its current and ongoing efforts to end anti-Black racism in America. If you are in the position to donate, please do so.

Virtual Talent Show Victory

Virtual Talent Show Victory

Yesterday was a fantastic first. Lightning in a Bottle, a California-based gathering that’s always wowed IRL (but was forced to cancel the 2020 physical iteration because of COVID), is hosting its first virtual festival this weekend and, aside from a few expected technical glitches (and awkward transitions), is proving itself a serious contender in the virtual festival space. Western-themed interactive environment Grand Artique hosted a virtual version of its annual talent show on day two (Saturday), and I got the distinct honor of being a contestant. Denver video guru and fellow musician Danny Fantastic hooked up a beautiful set, relevant visuals and mood lighting for my acoustic performance of original hydration mantra “Water is Your Friend” - complete with gargle solo. I rarely get nervous these days, but I definitely had butterflies. Turns out there were 1600 plus viewers tuned into LIB’s Twitch stream at the time. Although there were other incredible performances, including acts from Sethward, Honeycomb, Human Fountains, Star Leopard, Sootsie and more, The Grand Artique’s panel of judges crowned your favorite singing, guitar-slinging Nemo impersonator the virtual victor. As the French-accented judge Dr. Joy put it, “In Paris, there is nothing better than sex. Actually, maybe one thing: stinky cheese. I give you stinky cheese, my friend!” I could not have been more elated with the entire experience.

Image/Set/Lighting: Danny Fantastic
Costume: Premium Aquatics
Guitar: RainSong

Apologizing to Mom in Song

Apologizing to Mom in Song

With Mother’s Day around the corner, I’m curious: What was the worst thing you did as a kid? My sister and I once had a house party when my mom was out of town. When my buddy Lex barfed on the brand new [beige] carpet, we tried to spot-clean it with bleach. That genius miscalculation devalued the selling price of our childhood home by a cool grand. But it's the third verse climax of my Mother's Day Beatles parody “Sorry for the Bad Things We Did (As Kids),” a Mother’s Day singing telegram formula cooked up by my publicist Erin Barnes and I. It’s a winning formula. Check out the version I wrote for my mom below, and let us know if we can apologize to your mom in similar musical fashion.

Hand Washing Song

Hand Washing Song

While I’m often great at conceiving parody songs, I’ve got to give credit to my breakdancing real estate agent friend for this idea. Enjoy:)

Virtual Singing Telegrams

Virtual Singing Telegrams

As many of you know, Custom Singing Telegrams has been providing live, costumed entertainment for myriad occasions for 15 plus years. But the moment we find ourselves in right now is a fairly unprecedented one. With a near pandemic on our hands, many office employees are already working from home and schools and restaurants are temporarily closing their doors. We, too, realize physical gatherings aren't ideal. But we also know that your friends and family members will continue to have birthdays, anniversaries and a plethora of other occasions deserving of celebration. Enter: virtual singing telegrams – costumed serenades delivered via FaceTime, Zoom, WhatsApp and other video chat services. Aware of an occasion that warrants a special delivery amidst social distancing? Is a concert cancellation bumming someone you know out? Give us a call at (303) 931-8466. And hang in there, we’ll get through this together.

Music Video Casting

Music Video Casting

Would you like to do something special for your lover? Ever considered surprising your special someone with a singing telegram? Custom Singing Telegrams is offering a handful of Denver area lovers the unique opportunity to gift their significant others a singing telegram, free of charge. What's the catch? Singing telegram recipients would be filmed for the purposes of an Orange peel moses music video. If you think your lover would be thrilled about being ambushed for the purposes of a music video, send an email to yello@orangepeelmoses.com describing the nature of your relationship (including 3-5 pictures), amount of time you've been together, specific locations (office, park, workplace, house, hospital, restaurant, etc.) where you would want to surprise your lover (getting permission to film there would be essential), along with a link to expressive video footage of the proposed recipient with “Music Video Casting” in the subject field by Monday, October 29.

Let’s make something worth sharing:)

Graphic Designer Wanted

Graphic Designer Wanted

Citric Acid Records is on the hunt for a graphic designer to design and layout artwork for an upcoming Orange peel moses single release. Interested candidates can email a portfolio or website link to yello@orangepeelmoses.com 

Singing Leprechaun

Singing Leprechaun

Know someone who was born on St. Paddy's? Wanna embarrass someone just for the fun of it? Check out the Irish-ish singing telegram that Orange peel performed at Webroot a few years ago:)