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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 ...
Come Back Legacy of Brutality (1985) Box Set (1996) Static Age (1998) Cough/Cool Cough/Cool Collection II Box Set (1996) When the song was released on Collection and Box Set it retained the drum track of the original Misfits version, but Danzig overdubbed guitar and drum machine tracks and new vocals.
Legacy of Brutality is a compilation album of early songs by the American punk rock band Misfits, released in September 1985.It contains overdubbed mixes of previously unreleased songs, mainly from the January–February 1978 Static Age sessions.
American heavy metal band Metallica released a back-to-back cover version of both "Last Caress" and another Misfits song, "Green Hell". [19] The track, titled "Last Caress/Green Hell", was released on Metallica's 1987 EP The $5.98 E.P. - Garage Days Re-Revisited, as well as on their 1998 compilation album Garage Inc.. [20]
The Misfits is a boxed set of material by the horror punk band the Misfits, released in 1996 by Caroline Records. Packaged in a coffin -shaped, velvet-lined box, the set includes four compact discs covering most of the band's recorded material from the years when Glenn Danzig was their singer and songwriter.
"Hybrid Moments" is a song by the American punk rock band Misfits, recorded in 1978 for their proposed debut album Static Age. The song remained unreleased until 1985, when a remixed version of the song appeared on the compilation album Legacy of Brutality. The original recording was re-released on the 1996 boxed set The Misfits.
"Black Messiah" was released on the Misfits album, but was also released in single form. On the U.S. version of the "Live Life" single, "Black Messiah" replaced "In a Foreign Land" as the B-side. However, in Britain, "Black Messiah" became the third single from Misfits, backed with "Misfits". The single was unsuccessful, and did not chart.
An Acoustic Tribute to The Misfits. [9] In 2005 The Nutley Brass released Fiend Club Lounge, an album of Misfits songs performed in an instrumental lounge and space age pop style. [10] Another band to record albums of instrumental Misfits covers are The Crimson Ghosts, who released surf rock-style covers on Some Kinda Hits (2005) and Earth E.P ...