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"Pet Sematary" is a single by American punk rock band Ramones, from their 1989 album Brain Drain. The song, originally written for the Stephen King 1989 film adaptation of the same name, became one of the Ramones' biggest radio hits and was a staple of their concerts during the 1990s. [3] The song plays over the film’s credits. [4]
The Los Angeles Memorial Pet Park was founded in 1928 by veterinarian Eugene Jones, and was originally 15 acres. In 1973, Jones's family donated the site to the Los Angeles branch of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA). [5]
The Ramones [a] were an American ... "Pet Sematary". [85] ... and the Zeros [173] and the Dickies [174] from southern California.
Pet Sematary is a 1989 American supernatural horror film and the first adaptation of Stephen King's 1983 novel of the same name. Directed by Mary Lambert, with King writing the screenplay, it stars Dale Midkiff, Denise Crosby, Blaze Berdahl, Fred Gwynne, and Miko Hughes as Gage Creed. The title is a sensational spelling of "pet cemetery".
Brain Drain is the eleventh studio album by the American punk rock band Ramones, released on May 23, 1989. [3] [6] [7] It is the last Ramones release to feature bassist/songwriter/vocalist Dee Dee Ramone, the first to feature Marky Ramone since his initial firing from the band after 1983's Subterranean Jungle and the band's last studio album on Sire Records.
According to WFAA, it costs an average of $8,000 to be buried in a regular cemetery, but only $300 to be in a pet cemetery-- though, you'd have to be cremated first. With those kinds of savings ...
During the turn of the 80s and 90s, the band had 3 hits in the top 40 of national chart Modern Rock Tracks, being them Pet Sematary, Poison Heart and I Don't Wanna Grow Up (cover of Tom Waits). Their first, and only, cover album , Acid Eaters , was released in 1993, just a year and a half before the band's fourteenth and final studio album ...
It has a slower tempo than most Ramones songs. A music video was directed by Samuel Bayer and later released in the 2005 compilation box set Weird Tales of the Ramones as bonus content on the documentary DVD Lifestyles of the Ramones. It partially plays in a scene from the 1992 American horror film Pet Sematary Two.