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"Science Fiction/Double Feature" is the opening song to the original 1973 musical stage production, The Rocky Horror Show as well as its 1975 film counterpart The Rocky Horror Picture Show, book, music and lyrics by Richard O'Brien, musical arrangements by Richard Hartley. The song is reprised at the end of the show, with lyrics that reflect on ...
The choreography for "Time Warp". "Time Warp" was the fifth song in the original stage show (after "Science Fiction/Double Feature", "Dammit Janet", "Over at the Frankenstein Place" and "Sweet Transvestite") where it was performed by Riff-Raff (Richard O'Brien), Magenta (Patricia Quinn), Columbia (Nell Campbell) and the Narrator (Jonathan Adams), but fourth in the film (following "Over at the ...
The opening scene and song, "Science Fiction/Double Feature", consists of the lips of Patricia Quinn (who appears in the film later as the character Magenta and as 'Trixie the Usherette' in the original London production, where she also sings the song) but has the vocals of actor and Rocky Horror creator, Richard O'Brien (who appears as Magenta ...
Pages in category "Songs with lyrics by Richard O'Brien" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. ... Science Fiction/Double Feature; Super ...
The album peaked at No. 49 on the Billboard 200 in 1978. [4] It reached No. 12 on the Australian albums chart [5] [6] and No. 11 on the New Zealand albums chart. [7] William Ruhlmann of AllMusic gave the album a retrospective star rating of five stars out of five and described it as the "definitive version of the [Rocky Horror] score". [8]
The opening number of "Science Fiction/Double Feature", performed by Rivera and represented by a disembodied pair of red lips, mirrored the opening to The Rocky Horror Picture Show. The song segued into a rehearsal of "Over at the Frankenstein Place", which was followed by a rehearsal of " Dammit Janet "—the former with Michele on lead vocals ...
This weekend brings a chance to view November’s full moon, 2024’s last supermoon, followed by the Leonid meteor shower that’s set to peak Saturday night into Sunday.
The song is an awkward musical marriage proposal by Brad to Janet, after both have attended the wedding of two high school friends Ralph Hapschatt and Betty Munroe, just before setting off to visit their high school science teacher Dr. Everett Scott. [5] The music for the song exaggerates the rock-n-roll tendency to repeat simple chord ...