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"Clap for the Wolfman" is a song written by Burton Cummings, Bill Wallace, and Kurt Winter performed by their band, the Guess Who. The song appeared on their 1974 album, Road Food . The song was ranked #84 on Billboard magazine's Top Hot 100 songs of 1974 .
The Jaggerz continued to release singles through Kama Sutra until 1973, when they moved to the RCA subsidiary Wooden Nickel Records. In 1973, the Jaggerz performed on the Wolfman Jack novelty album Through The Ages that was released on Wooden Nickel Records. They backed up DJ Wolfman Jack on ten songs including "The Rapper". [10]
On the first RCA CD reissue, the two sides of the original LP were reversed, thus the album begins with side 2 and "Clap for the Wolfman", rather than side 1 and "Star Baby". In 2012, the album was reissued on CD by RCA/Iconolassic with 2 bonus tracks. In 2018, the album was reissued again in the UK by Dutton Vocalion on the Super Audio CD format.
The song was covered (as "L.T.W.T.M.S.") by indie pop band The Trouble with Sweeney on their 2004 EP Fishtown Briefcase. [48] Ex-Wings member Laurence Juber covered the song on his 2005 album One Wing, despite not being a member of the band at the time of the song's recording and release. [49] [50]
"Hand Me Down World" is song written by Kurt Winter, performed and released in 1970 by The Guess Who, for whom Winter served as lead guitarist from 1970 to 1974 and 1977 to 1978. It reached #10 in Canada, [2] #17 on the Billboard Hot 100, [3] and #65 in Australia. The song was also released in the United Kingdom as a single, but did not chart. [4]
"Sour Suite" is a song written by Burton Cummings and performed by The Guess Who. It reached #12 in Canada [1] and #50 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1972. [2] The song was featured on their 1971 album, So Long, Bannatyne. [3] Cummings said it took between two and three days to write the song.
Born to the West (reissue title Hell Town) is a 1937 American Western film, starring John Wayne, Marsha Hunt and John Mack Brown. Filmed in black and white and based upon a Zane Grey novel, the movie incorporates footage from an earlier and higher budgeted silent version, a common practice of the era.
The song was cited as a reference to a portal to hell by a late 1960s Charles Manson-like cult leader, David Berg in letters regarding his group "The Family". [11] Another Hullabaloo scene was shot featuring DiCaprio singing " Don't Fence Me In " by Cole Porter and Robert Fletcher but it was not included in the final cut of the film.