The Rocky Horror Picture Show Soundtrack (1975) - Ode Records
Happy Halloween Friends,
We're celebrating right this year... giving out candy, listening to records and polishing off a bottle of Amontillado while reading passages from Edgar Allen Poe by candlelight!
But Halloween just wouldn't be Halloween without Brad & Janet, the Time Warp, a sweet Transvestite (from Transsexual, Transyvlvania), Meat Loaf, Riff Raff and Susan Sarandon's sweet jack-o-lanterns in their prime!
Because of the film's incredible cult status the soundtrack is often overlooked, but trust us friends, its worth the listen! Its campy and glammy, with healthy doses of Broadway, Bowie, Queen and 1950's rock and roll. Its like "Grease"-on-Acid!
Happy Halloween kids! We're off to TP some houses!
RATING: 5 Science Fiction Double Features out of 5
Its that time of year again: there's a chill in the air; dark comes early; the shadows are long; and a queer breeze blows the dry leaves in the backyard.
Meanwhile we're comfortably holed up inside, lighting some candles, drinking some wine and classing the tiki bar up with this LP of macabre-inspired classical works. Its frightfully enjoyable! Beelzebub himself would be proud!
There are four pieces represented here: Mussorgsky's "Night on Bald Mountain", Saint-Saens's "Danse Macabre", Liszt's "Mephisto Waltz" and Hector Berlioz's "The Dream of the Witch's Sabbath." The Mussorgsky and Berlioz pieces have themes that have to do with witches-- and their covens-- celebrating their Sabbath. In fact, last April we celebrated Walpurgis Night with Berlioz's Symphonie Fantastique. Franz Liszt's "Mephisto Waltz" has to do with the devil crashing a village wedding and working all the guests into an orgiastic frenzy with his fiddle-playing!
Speaking of fiddling... Saint-Saen's "Danse Macabre" is about Death appearing at midnight on Halloween and playing his fiddle until the dead arise from their graves for one last killer romp! Here's a short cartoon that played on PBS around Halloween back in the 80's... Holy Lucifer!
Hail Satan Friends! You're just in time to help me run the checklist for our Halloween Super Satanic Tiki Bar Blowout! Lots of records? Check! One dozen black capes? Check! One Candle-laden altar? Check! One goblet of goat urine? Check! One Virgin? (Uh Oh!) Oh well, no matter. Halloween is a time of year when I really like to encourage free-form cocktail making. A dash of this and a sprinkle of that can make for some real magic in your cauldron. Whether the album title below suggests animal sacrifice or Jamaican cuisine, Goat's Head Soup is a perfectly provocative record for this spooky time of year. Nothing gets your hips shaking and your cup sloshing like the first track. Big points for having this on vinyl, as the pops and crackles make everything all the more hall-o-weenish. Check out the recipe below (my own horrid creation) and you'll be dancing with Mr. D all night (or Mr. Pillow....hey, I'm gettin' old kids!). Tiki's T's Blood Orange Pentagram Punch
Half pint of blood orange juice Pint of tangerine Juice 1 can of ginger ale Pint of cranberry cocktail Dash of vanilla extract Light rum to taste (be your own boss!!) Dark rum to taste Lots of maraschino cherries and orange slices Mix in novelty bowl and serve in punch cups to your thirsty fellow worshippers.
XO! (in blood), Tiki T.
The Rolling Stones - "Goat's Head Soup" (1973) - Rolling Stones Records
Hello Friends,
Considered by most to be the final record in their "Golden Era", The Rolling Stones' Goat's Head Soup is a dark, mysterious and inherently sad record. Picking up where the iconic & epic Exile on Main Street left off, despair & death loom large. Its the end of an era kids and with Halloween less than a week away, it seemed an appropriate listen!
The opening song, "Dancing with Mr. D" pretty much gives us an idea of what's to come on the rest of the LP: laid-back blues-rock with one foot in the grave! With lyrics like: "Down in the graveyard where we have our tryst / The air smells sweet, the air smells sick" and "Human skulls is hangin' right 'round his neck / The palms of my hands is clammy and wet". The "D" stands for Death and by 1973, the Glimmer Twins have definitely had their dance cards full!
The second track is the great, underrated "100 Years Ago"-- a nostalgic and wistful ballad with a country twinge! This is followed by Keith Richards' heartbreaking "Coming Down Again" written about his tumultuous relationship with actress/model/muse Anita Pallenberg who had previously dated the since-deceased, Brian Jones. (Editor's Note: She dated him while he was still alive!) This song might also contain the best Stones' lyrics ever:
Slipped my tongue in someone else's pie;
Tasting better ev'ry time
He turned green and tried to make me cry;
Being hungry, it ain't no crime!
You said it Keef! (He's talking about pumpkin pie, right?)
Side One concludes with the two singles from the album "Doo Doo Doo Doo Doo (Heartbreaker)" and "Angie". The first is a funked-up, sleazy tale of some cops shooting an innocent guy in NYC and the second is their famous ballad which is either written about Angela Bowie, Angie Dickenson or Keith & Anita's daughter, Dandelion Angela. Or it could be about detoxing off heroin. Take your pick!
Side Two does not quite live up to the standard put up on Side One. But, really, how could it? "Silver Train", "Hide Your Love" and "Star Star" are all songs that could be best described as Stonesy. By this point in their career, I think they've earned the right to their own adjective! The soulful, "Winter" is the stand-out on Side Two. This song is so chilly that it makes you want to put on a Winter coat-- no matter what time of year it may be! (This song was supposedly co-written by guitarist Mick Taylor who never received any songwriting credit! Boo!) Goat's Head Soup was recorded at Dynamic Sound Studios in Kingston, Jamaica. It would be the last Stones' record produced by Jimmy Miller (who was quite drug-addled from working with the band since '68!) A lot of has been made over the album's title over the years. What does it mean? Is it Satanic? Are these boy hiding out in Jamaica so they can do drugs during the day and conjure demons by night? Actually, I think when the band was in Jamaica they chowed down on something known as "Mannish Water" aka "Goathead Soup". Here's a recipe... Enjoy!
RATING: 5 Eyes in Her Skull Burning Like Coals out of 5
Richard Hayman and His Orchestra - "Voodoo!" (1959) - Mercury Records
Hello Friends,
The natives are restless on Vinyl in the Valley tonight! I'm busy playing records and mixing up some cocktails while Tiki T. is busy poking needles into some voodoo doll she made! Man, I hope these chest pains are just indigestion!
Aptly titled, "Voodoo", this album is weird and scary like a good tiki album should be. The rhythms are tribal and spell-binding. The moods are exotic and dense. This reaks of atmosphere! Perfect for your next Halloween party! As the liner notes state: "Here is the fearsome fire and the brewing pot. Here are the frightening shadows... You're not alone any longer. The room is shaken with the frantic dances of the hungans-- so-called priests of voodoo... the cauldron boils and froths. The walls echo to the cries and wails of the believers. That's voodoo!" There's a very soundtrack-y feel to this record. Its almost as if Hayman was scoring a 1950's travel documentary about Haitian sugar plantations after dark! One "song"-- "Incantation"-- with its exaggerated shaman incantations, actually makes you feel like some of the bodies buried in the backyard have started stirring!
Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass - "Herb Alpert's Ninth" (1967) - A&M Records
Hello Friends,
Poor Tiki T. is feeling a little under the weather tonight so to "warm" things up we're listening to some Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass on the old turntable!
As the title implies, this is Senor Alpert's ninth record with the Brass. Unlike what the title (and cover art) implies, this is NOT a record of Latin-themed Beethoven covers! Most of the songs are pretty lively and shrill in the typical Herb Alpert-style like the top 40 hit, "A Banda", Cole Porter's "My Heart Belongs to Daddy", "The Love Nest", "The Happening", "Flea Bag" and a medley from Bizet's opera, "Carmen." There's also some more subdued tracks like the Beatles' "With a Little Help From My Friends" and Judy Garland's-on-Nyquil, "The Trolley Song". The highlight of this record, however, is Alpert's solemnly exotic tribute to songwriter & guitarist Ervan "Bud" Coleman who died earlier in the year.