The Chatswood Youth Song

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Revision as of 01:01, 30 October 2024 by Lilire5435 (talk | contribs) (Lilire5435 moved page Woo Hoo to The Chatswood Youth Song: Misspelled title)

ⓘ This lostwave is classified as unsolved.

The Chatswood Youth Song
Alternative name(s) Woo Hoo, She Came On
Genre Pop Punk
Year 1997
Status Unsolved
Original poster Chernyat
Search started 2019
File:ChatswoodYouthSong.wav

The Chatswood Youth Song (also known as "Woo Hoo" and "She Came On") is an unidentified pop-punk song featured in the documentary "Video Surveillance: Race Around Chatswood" produced by the Chatswood Youth Centre in Chatswood, Australia.

Background

On December 17th, 2019, Reddit user Chernyat first posted the song to the subreddits r/Lostwave,[1] r/HelpMeFind,[2] r/NameThatSong,[3] and r/sydney[4] after discovering a tape in a thrift store in Newtown, Sydney that featured footage recorded at the Chatswood Youth Centre in August 1997, which played the song throughout most of the video.[1]

On the same day, the song was first reuploaded to YouTube by user ACE's Reposts,[5] and it was featured in a video by C.W. Schultz titled "10 MORE Mysterious Songs" on September 25th, 2020.[6]

On March 27th, 2024, YouTuber Strange Australian featured the song in a video titled "The Lost Media of Australia Iceberg Explained" and later contacted a cast member from the video who explained that the film could have been made for a state government-funded creative arts festival called ArtStart.[7]

Through this information, Strange Australian and Chernyat discovered a state government website from 1997 that confirmed the film's title as Video Surveillance: Race Around Chatswood and its participation in the ArtStart 97 festival.[8] Additionally, they discovered that the Ku-ring-gai Council, a Northern Sydney local government area close to Willoughby Council, where Chatswood is located, had its own ArtStart 97 program.[9]

The program involved recording unsigned local bands for a CD that would be sold at a live performance at the St. Ives Youth Service Centre in St. Ives, New South Wales.[9] After searching newspapers for mentions of this performance, the search team discovered that the album was titled "If It Fitz",[10] but this lead was debunked on October 14th, 2024, when the full CD was uploaded to YouTube and did not include the song.[11][12]

Leads

Possible

Debunked

  • Youthrock (1997): Compilation featuring Australian youth bands, confirmed to not feature the song.[13]
  • The Rimquatters - Off To Blacksburg: Hoax post.[14]

Lyrics

Resources