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Alice Cooper (born Vincent Damon Furnier; February 4, 1948) [1] is an American rock singer and songwriter whose career spans sixty years. With a raspy voice and a stage show that features numerous props and stage illusions, [2] Cooper is considered by many music journalists and peers to be "The Godfather of Shock Rock". [3]
The song is well known for its music video, which combines clips from Jason Lives with original footage featuring Cooper performing the song and Jason Voorhees played, as he is in the film, by C. J. Graham menacing teenagers at a midnight showing of Jason Lives. It was directed by Jeffrey Abelson from a concept by Keith Williams.
"Wind-Up Toy" is the twelfth and final track on Alice Cooper's nineteenth studio album Hey Stoopid. Though the song was never released as a single (it does feature as the B-side to the "Hey Stoopid" single), the song is very popular among Cooper's fans, often favourite above all others by some.
Creem said the song, "is a second cousin to "School's Out" with a chorus of child-things sounding like Cooper's dead babies resurrected to sing back-up vocals." [3] NME agreed it was, "School's Out" all over again, complete with demented kiddie choir and watered-down Clockwork Orange braggadoccio."
"I Am the Future" is a 1982 song by American rock musician Alice Cooper recorded for the 1982 film Class of 1984. [4] The song was one of two singles released from his seventh solo studio album Zipper Catches Skin (1982). The single did not chart, and despite the advent of MTV at the time a promotional video was not created for it.
"I Never Cry" is a song by American rock singer Alice Cooper. It was originally released on his second solo studio album Alice Cooper Goes to Hell (1976). The song was written by Cooper and Dick Wagner .
Love It to Death is the third studio album by American rock band Alice Cooper, released on March 9, 1971.It was the band's first commercially successful album and the first album that consolidated the band's aggressive hard-rocking sound, instead of the psychedelic and experimental rock style of their first two albums.
The song was written by Alice Cooper, Bruce Roberts and Andy Goldmark. It features Steven Tyler on guest vocals, although Tyler does not appear in the song's music video. The song only peaked at #89 on the US charts, but the song had bigger success in Australia , achieving #47 at its peak, though it was the second least successful single from ...