• A polka medley performed at a 1982
Missing Persons concert is considered to be the first official Yankovic polka medley. It included the songs "
Jocko Homo" by
Devo, "
Homosapien" by
Pete Shelley, "
Sex Junkie" by The
Plasmatics, "
T.V.O.D." by
The Normal, "
Bad Boys Get Spanked" by
The Pretenders, "
TV Party" by
Black Flag, "
Janitor" by
Suburban Lawns, and "
People Who Died" by
The Jim Carroll Band. • According to Yankovic's drummer,
Jon "Bermuda" Schwartz, a
U2 polka was planned for
Even Worse, but was left off the album due to licensing issues. U2's music would be parodied on
Bad Hair Day in "Cavity Search", a parody of "
Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me, Kill Me". • In 1991, Yankovic appeared on an episode of
FOX's The Sunday Comics performing a polka medley featuring songs from "Polkas on 45" and "Polka Your Eyes Out". It included "Cradle of Love", "Tom's Diner", "Love Shack", "Clarinet Polka", "Pump Up The Jam", "Hey Jude", "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida", "Hey Joe", "Burning Down the House", "The Humpty Dance", "Cherry Pie", "Miss You Much", "Jumpin' Jack Flash", and "My Generation". • In 1995, Al performed accordion and the backing vocal part on "
Who Stole the Kishka?" on one of
Frankie Yankovic's final records,
Songs of the Polka King, Vol. 1. • "Polkamon", an original polka song which lists the names of several dozen Pokémon creatures, is one of the ending themes for the English
dub of
Pokémon The Movie 2000: The Power of One, and is featured on the film's
soundtrack. • In 2018, Yankovic remixed "
Feel It Still" and "
Live in the Moment" by
Portugal. The Man from their album
Woodstock, adding a polka backing track and additional vocals. • In 2022,
the soundtrack album to the film
Weird: The Al Yankovic Story included Yankovic performing a 35-second solo instrumental rendition of "
Clarinet Polka" on the accordion. A 19-second snippet of a portion of the
Ramones' "
Beat on the Brat" on the soundtrack features some accordion polka riffing, over a punk-rock arrangement. • 2024 saw Al contribute to "New Year's Eve Polka (5-4-3-2-1)" on
Jimmy Fallon's album
Holiday Seasoning with
The Roots. == Reception ==