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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 .
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 Wolfman (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the score album to the 2010 film of the same name directed by Joe Johnston, which is a remake on the 1941 film The Wolf Man. The film initially had an original score composed by Danny Elfman, before it was rejected and Elfman eventually replaced by Australian musician Paul Haslinger. The ...
In Canada, the song spent three weeks at number 9. [4] The song was ranked as the 92nd biggest Canadian hit of 1974. [5] Although The Guess Who had a dozen higher-charting songs in the US, "Star Baby" remained on the chart longer than any of their other hits - 19 weeks, which was four weeks longer than their number-one hit "American Woman". [6]
Blake stars as Noah "Hardstep" Rivers, a hard-living Catholic priest at a church in a crime-ridden neighborhood on the east side of Los Angeles. [2] Rivers was rather unusual for a priest, as he was a former criminal, played billiards, and didn't have the greatest of speaking skills.
The group's third album, Helltown, was released on September 28, 2018. A music video for the track "Hide it in the Night" was released to promote the album. The group subsequently toured with Monster Magnet before appearing at Psycho Smokeout Los Angeles on April 20, 2019. The group then made a headlining tour of Europe in May 2019, making ...
Wolfman Jack is sampled on J-Dilla's 2006 album, Donuts, on the track "Anti-American Graffiti". The sample comes from the 1973 album, How Time Flys by David Ossman. In his 2020 song "Murder Most Foul," Bob Dylan invokes Wolfman Jack many times. [28] Wolfman Jack appeared at the Modesto American Graffiti Festival several times, for the first ...
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.