Dracula's Greatest Hits - Gene Moss (Full Album) (With Download Link)
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 5 ก.พ. 2025
- Here is a Fun Halloween Parody Album This is a rare CD rip of the album. Enjoy!!!!!
I Want To Bite You Hand, Drac The Knife, King Kong Stomp, Monster Hootenanny, Ghoul Days, Frankenstein, The New Frankenstein and Johnny Song, Monster Goose Rhymes, Surf Monster, Monster Bossa Nova, Carry Me Back To Transylvania, Little Black Bag
DOWNLOAD: www.dropbox.co...
When we were kids, we played this record so often you could see through it.
I discovered this album at The Great Escape in Nashville in the early 1980s. I played at every Halloween for my children, especially a ritual whilst driving out to Pacific Missouri to go to the Six Flags fright Fest. Then, when I had a radio show on 50,000 W station in St. Louis, overnight, I would play one song to begin each hour during the whole month of October.
Used to hear this during Sir Graves Ghastly's TV show in Detroit 1969
Gene Moss record from 1964
The songs are great monster parody songs and the artwork of all our favorite monsters are really groovy in bkl n wht 60's style by known artist Jack Davis. the back of the record album has a full monster collage drawn by Mr. Davis and there were a set of coooool Monster trading cards, 15 of them of favorite monsters. one of the best monster parody albums made imo
0:00 1. I Want To Bite Your Hand ( I Want To Hold Your Hand)
2:29 2. Drack The Knife (Mack The Knife)
5:15 3. King Kong Stomp
6:54 4. Monster Hootenanny
9:14 5. Ghoul Days (School Days)
11:35 6. Frankenstein {Clementine)
13:30 7. The New Frankenstein And Johnny Song (Frankie and Johnny)
16:36 8. Monster Goose Rhymes
19:13 9. Surf Monster
21:07 10. Monster Bossa Nova
23:23 11. Carry Me Back To Transylvania
26:01 12. Little Black Bag (Little Black Jug)
This is CLASSIC Halloween stuff! Our local Halloween host in Detroit, Sir Graves Ghastly, used to use these songs as part of the show! Great memories! Thanks so much for posting this and even more for the download link!
Yes, I remember Sir Graves doing a skit to this tune.
I have many fond memories of this album from my childhood, listening to it on the record player while my mother passed out religious tracts to the trick-or-treaters, and again the next day while my father collected the soggy tracts off the lawn to be reused the following year.
Thank you soooooo much for this upload. I had this album but it was lost during a move, I thought I'd never hear it again. I'm surprised at how many songs I was able to sing along with even though it's been at least 40 years since I heard them last; A testament to the enduring influence of this great comedy treasure.
Man I used to have this album and loved it. Took it to show and tell at school and when I was walking home it slid out off the jacket and broke. That had to be 40 some years ago!
I got that CD. I just uploaded a song. I should have looked first. Glad to know I am not the only one out there. I made a slide show showing all the pic. Very cool !!!
Thank you for uploading this. I used to have this album, one of my high school girlfriends gave it to me. She didn't know why she had it and thought it was stupid. When I said I loved it she said I could have it. What do high school girls know? I can't remember what became of it. I may have passed it on to another fan. I'll definitely download it. Thanks again!
Glad to Do It.
my very first album. i also played this down to a very thin veneer.
I just adore this album of Halloween parodies (plus a couple of originals). I mean, "I Want to Bite Your Hand" and "Drac the Knife" .... all recorded with a crack 1964 band that sounds like they could be Paul Revere and the Raiders doing a side gig.. Gene Moss' Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff impersonation vocals are actually quite strong. Better than Bobby Pickett IMO. And the background singing "ghouls" are hilarious.
hey so spooky :-D and funny!!!
I could listen to 6:55 all day :)
Moss later worked on "ROGER RAMJET".
With "Count Batguy"!
ME ENCANTAAAAAA
I love this record and I listen to it all the time, but I have one question: Why does Gene Moss think "Sure!" is one of Dracula's catchphrases? I mean, I think it's funny, and I use it every time I imitate Dracula, but where does it come from?
I think he's saying "chew" and... no clue
This is on CD somewhere? Do you have to back cover art too?
Here are all the pictures: toeoffrogproductions.ecrater.com/p/11138867/draculas-greatest-hits-cd