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"We Are 138" was written by Glenn Danzig and recorded at C.I. Studios in New York by the Misfits in January–February 1978 for their proposed debut album Static Age. [2] The song was first released on the B-side of the band's single "Bullet" in 1978, and would also be included as the opening track on their 1980 EP Beware, which combined tracks from the previously released "Bullet" and "Horror ...
The compilation album Misfits (1986), released three years after the band's breakup, included "Bullet" and "Hollywood Babylon", while Collection II (1995) included "We Are 138" and "Attitude". The Misfits box set in 1996 presented the complete Static Age album for the first time, including all four tracks from the "Bullet" single.
138 is a sphenic number, [1] an Ulam number, [2] an abundant number, [3] and a square-free congruent number. [ 4 ] Four concentric magic circles , with a magic constant of 138.
Several of the songs on Static Age were based on horror films and American historical events from the 1960s and 1970s. "Return of the Fly" borrows its title from the 1959 film Return of the Fly, and most of the song's lyrics consist of repetition of the film's title, actors, and characters: "Return of the Fly, Return of the Fly/With Vincent Price/Helen Delambre, Helen Delambre/François ...
Jerry Only is adamant that "Braineaters" was recorded only once by the Misfits. "Mephisto Waltz" was rehearsed by the Misfits but never recorded by the band. "We Are 138" and "Attitude" are the tracks from the Bullet EP that were not present on Collection I. There is very little difference between these and the mixes on the Static Age LP.
The two Kansas mothers allegedly killed by members of the anti-government religious sect “God’s Misfits” were brutally stabbed to death before they were buried in a freezer, officials have ...
Famous Monsters is the fifth studio album by the American punk rock band Misfits, released on October 5, 1999.It is the second in the post-Danzig era of the band, and the last album to feature Doyle Wolfgang von Frankenstein, Michale Graves, and Dr. Chud, who would all quit the band in 2000.
A religious group called "God's Misfits”, based in South Carolina and led by a man calling himself “Squirrel’, has distanced itself from murder suspects allegedly operating under the same ...