Robert George Pickett (February 11, 1938 – April 25,
2007), known by the pen name Bobby "Boris" Pickett, was an American
singer, best known for co-writing and performing the 1962 hit novelty song
"Monster Mash."
Bobby was fascinated by horror movies as a child. By the
time he was nine, he started to imitate Boris Karloff, whom he would see at the
movie theatre that his father managed in Somerville, Massachusetts. Following
his discharge from the US Army in 1961, he moved to Los Angeles to try his hand
at show business. As a member of a vocal group called The Cordials he would do
impersonations between songs, often using his impression of Karloff, which was
a crowd favourite.
His friend and fellow band mate, Lenny Capizi suggested
that the pair try to take advantage of the novelty song craze that was
happening in the early sixties by writing a tune around Bobby's Karloff
imitation. It took nearly a year after the suggestion to get around to it, but
when they did, the two worked out "The Monster Mash" in about a half
an hour.
To record their song they approached producer Gary
Paxton, who sang The Hollywood Argyles' 1960 number one hit, "Alley
Oop". Pickett and Paxton, along with Leon Russell, Johnny McCrae and Rickie
Page recorded the tune in one take, and when the session was done, it was
Paxton who came up with the idea of putting "Bobby 'Boris' Pickett And The
Cryptkickers" on the record's label. Pickett also added all his own sound
effects: the creaky door opening is a nail being pulled from a piece of wood,
the boiling cauldron is Pickett blowing bubbles into a cup of water with a
straw, and the chains are him moving chains up and down.
Gary Paxton took
the tape to four major labels, who all turned it down. Not discouraged, he had
a thousand copies pressed himself and started delivering them to radio stations
across California. Soon, "The Monster Mash" was getting air play and
London Records, who had rejected the song earlier, called Paxton to sign a
deal. Eight weeks later, on October 20, 1962, the record hit number one on the
Billboard Hot 100, just in time for Halloween.
Over the years, the song has been re-released three times
and re-entered the Hot 100 on August 29, 1970, peaking at number 91 and again
in May of 1972, when it reached number 10. Several attempts were made at other
"monster" songs. A Christmas-themed follow-up called "Monster's
Holiday" was also issued in 1962 and reached #30 in December of that year.
"Blood Bank Blues", "Werewolf Watusi" and "Monster
Swim" followed, but all failed to chart. Pickett did manage to reach the
Billboard chart again in June, 1963 when "Graduation Day" peaked at
#80. In 1975, he recorded a spoof on Star Trek called "Star Drek"
with Peter Ferrara. In 1985 he released "Monster Rap", which
describes the mad scientist's frustration at being unable to teach his creation
how to talk. The problem is solved when the monster learns to rap.
"The Monster Mash" has been the recipient of
three Gold records, selling an estimated 4 million copies since its release,
and is one of only three records to ever hit the Billboard Hot 100 on three
separate occasions. The song has become a part of American pop culture, so much
so, that it has even been played to wake up the astronauts on Halloween Day.
The song has been used in several movies, including Sweetheart's Dance and
"Halloween III and has been heard on such popular TV shows as The
Simpsons, Cheers, Rosanne, Doogie Howser, Happy Days, and Sesame Street. Even
Boris Karloff himself sang the song on mid-sixties TV.
As for Bobby, he remained in demand for Halloween
performances and continued to tour at small venues and special events
throughout the US. In 1966 he hosted a weekly disc jockey show on KRLA in Los
Angeles and later worked as a writer and an actor, appearing in the films It's
a Bikini World in 1967, Chrome and Hot Leather in 1971, Deathmaster in 1972 and
Lobster Man From Mars in 1989.
Pickett and television author Sheldon Allman wrote the
musical Frankenstein Unbound. In 1995 the co-writers of Disney's Toy Story,
Joel Cohen and Alec Sokolow, produced a movie of it, originally entitled
Frankenstein Sings, but later released in the US under Monster Mash: The Movie
in which Pickett starred.
In 2005 Pickett published his autobiography called
Monster Mash: Half Dead in Hollywood. Bobby performed his final gig in
November, 2006 and died of leukemia on April 25th, 2007, at the age of 69. (Info mainly edited from classicbands.com bio)
5 comments:
For “Bobby (Boris) Pickett And The Crypt-Kickers – The Original Monster Mash” go here:
https://www.sendspace.com/file/2abe0q
1) Monster Mash 3:07
2) Rabian-The Fiendage Idol 2:37
3) Blood Bank Blues 2:47
4) Graveyard Shift 2:07
5) Skully Gully 2:01
6) Wolfbane 3:22
7) Monster Minuet 1:54
8) Transylvania Twist 1:33
9) Sinister Stomp 2:15
10) Me And My Mummy 2:32
11) Monster Motion 2:29
12) Monster Mash Party 2:50
13) Irresistible Igor 2:32
14) Bellas' Bash 2:47
15) Let's Fly Away 0:47
16) Monster’s Holiday 3:08
Thanks to Les @ Loadsamusic Forum for active link
Artwork here:
https://www.sendspace.com/file/o0dgyj
Thanks for this one BoppinBob, nothing like a bit of crypt kicking' on a frosty Monday morning. Mordor Lives?
Any chance of a re-up for this album? Strangely, I'm finding it exceeding difficult to track down...
I'd appreciate it!
All the best to you from Pee-Pee Soaked Heckhole
www.peepeesoakedheckhole.blogspot.com
Hi HFM Here it is
https://www.mediafire.com/file/mptoqb3ce1c9hee/Bobby_Boris_Pickett_-_Monster_Mash.rar/file
Dropped by your blog. I manged to get Purple Chick Buddy Holly a few years ago. A must for Buddy Holly fans. To complement it for those few missing items have a look here:
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Annie-Buddy-Holly-Three-Tunes/dp/B000WW2FVS.
I have this Rollercoaster CD somewhere on an external drive. (Must get round to actually logging what I've got on all 10 of 'em - probably when I retire next year!)
Regards, Bob
Excellent - thanks for the re-up, Bob! And thanks for checking out the blog! Let me know if anything there strikes your fancy!
Best regards always from Pee-Pee Soaked Heckhole
www.peepeesoakedheckhole.blogspot.com
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