Halloween is just around the corner. Young ghosts, goblins and zombies will soon
be out trick or treating, so be careful if you’re driving. Our quiz this time out, is about songs that
had a ‘ghost-y’ or ‘supernatural’ theme to them. In the ‘60’s and ‘70’s, there was a group
calling themselves “The Zombies”. Rob
Zombie is a well known musician (now film director) who co-founded the band,
White Zombie. There were plenty of ‘Halloween-y’
hit songs over the years too, such as “Ghost Riders In The Sky”, “Bat Out Of
Hell” and “The Purple People Eater”. All
of the songs in this quiz made the Top Forty, and we give you the year each one
was a hit, so how hard could it really be, huh?
So, turn out all the lights, and using only the ghostly light from your
computer screen, take your best shot at each question.
QUESTIONS
1. The video for this 1984 #
1 theme song from a movie franchise about the paranormal features cameos from such
celebrities as former SNL writer and now U.S. Senator Al Franken, actors Danny
DeVito (“It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia”), George Wendt (“Cheers”), Peter
Falk (“Columbo”), Melissa Gilbert (“Little House On The Prairie”), Chevy Chase
(“Community”), John Candy (“Uncle Buck”), Terri Garr (“Tootsie”); plus singers Irene
Cara (“Fame”) and Carly Simon (“You’re So Vain”). So, if you wanted to call a friend to help
you answer this question, “Who you gonna call?” (HINT ALERT).
2. In 1962, this song,
perfectly geared for Halloween, skyrocketed to the # 1 spot on Billboards’ Hot
100 chart where it remained for two weeks.
Interestingly, the same song, (“It was a graveyard smash”) (HINT ALERT) jumped
back into the Top Ten (at # 10),
eleven years later in 1973. The singer
did a pretty good vocal impression of one of the best known horror movie actors
of his day. Was that actor: a. Bela Lugosi b. Vincent Price or c. Boris
Karloff?
3. This 1978 song about
‘creatures with fangs and very sharp teeth that often hang out in dark, scary
woods at night’ (especially during a full moon), had a lot of starpower
connected to it. Mick Fleetwood and John
McVie of Fleetwood Mac played drums and bass respectively, on it. Singer/ songwriter Jackson Browne produced
it. It climbed to the # 21 spot on
Billboards’ Hot 100, but it gets played a lot this time of year, because of its
Halloween connection. The singer
unfortunately developed cancer and died in 2003. Can you name this song? (“Ow Ow Owooooooo”)
4. Michael Jackson shot a
very scary video for his Top Five single, “Thriller”, directed by John Landis,
the man behind-the-camera for “Animal House”, “Trading Places” and “Blues
Brothers”. On the single hit “Thriller”
(from Michael’s 1984 # 1 album of the same name), which legendary horror movie
star appears reading a poem near the end of the song, then laughs
manically? Was it: a. Peter Cushing b. Peter Lorre or c. Vincent Price?
5. This singer is not to be confused with the
long tongued bass player from KISS, but in 1964, he had a # 11 hit with his
song about a very scary place, which normally is the place where we spend much
of our time, watch TV, eat and sleep and is usually not inhabited by ghosts. But this particular place in this particular
song does have ghosts. So, what’s the
name of this song already?
ANSWERS
1. It’s “Ghostbusters” from Ray Parker Jr. and
comes from the 1984 movie, “Ghostbusters”, directed by Ivan Reitman (“Twins”, “Ghostbusters
II” and “Father’s Day”) starred Dan Aykroyd, Bill Murray, Harold Ramis, Ernie
Hudson, Annie Potts, Rick Moranis and Sigourney Weaver. The song “Ghostbusters” was nominated for an
Academy Award for “Best Original Song” category, but lost to Stevie Wonders’ “I
Just Called To Say I Love You” from the movie “The Woman in Red”. There have been plenty of rumours that
”Ghostbusters 3” is being made, but we’ll just have to wait and see if it
really comes off.
2. The answer was c. Boris
Karloff and the singer was Bobby ‘Boris’ Pickett with his 1962 # 1 hit (and
1973 # 10 hit) “Monster Mash”. Of
course, to be fair, if you’d said a. Bela Lugosi, you would also have been
correct as Bobby ‘Boris’ sings one line as Dracula, “Whatever happened to my
Transylvania Twist?”. Robert George
Pickett was a huge fan of horror films and often did horror movie star
impressions in his nightclub act, thus gaining the nickname of ‘Boris’. Every record company in Los Angeles turned
down “Monster Mash”, but a small label, Garpax, owned by singer/songwriter/ producer
Gary Paxton agreed to record and produce it…and the rest, as they say, is show
biz history.
3. Warren Zevon is the co-writer and singer. “Werewolves of London” is the song.
Zevon wrote several songs that
Linda Ronstadt recorded, including “Hasten Down The Wind” and “Poor Poor
Pitiful Me” (# 31 in 1978). Zevon died
on September 7, 2003. He was 56.
4. Michael Jackson’s
“Thriller” featured the voice (and ultra scary laugh) of horror movie veteran c.
Vincent Price.
5. “Haunted House” by Jumpin’
Gene Simmons is the answer we were looking for.
Simmons, who’s name Gene Simmons of KISS ‘borrowed’ it as a tribute, hailed
from Tupelo, Mississippi, the same town Elvis Presley came from, before his
family moved to Memphis, Tennessee. In
fact, Jumpin’ Gene Simmons also recorded for Sun Records, as did Elvis before
he signed with RCA Victor and Gene was the opening act for Elvis quite a few
times in EP’s early years. “Haunted
House” wasn’t on Sun though. It was
released on another Memphis label, Hi Records.
The ‘original’ Gene Simmons died in 2006 at the age of 73.
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