Тёмный

Sheena's in a Goth Gang - The Cramps (Spooky Beatnik 2024 Remonster) 

Подписаться
Просмотров 30
% 2

Sheena's in a Goth Gang, from The Cramps' 1997 album,
Big Beat From Badsville.
She's digging up the graveyard, black lips and toenails
A brand new bat wing at the county jail
Like Tammy Trapeze, the dead acrobat
I dig her deeply when she swings like that
Sheena's in a goth gang
Sheena's in a goth gang
Sheena's in a goth gang now
Mixed up women, do you have one in your house?
She's in the forbidden vampire underground
In the cult of the cobra, snakes in her hair
She looks so macabre with her cobweb stare
Sheena's in a goth gang
Sheena's in a goth gang
Sheena's in a goth gang now
Sheena's in a goth gang
Sheena's in a goth gang
Sheena's in a goth gang now

Видеоклипы

Опубликовано:

 

5 авг 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 4   
@fernandomaron87
@fernandomaron87 Месяц назад
Paul, you nailed it yet another one with this one! Your edit captures that vibe perfectly. Absolutely love it! The Cramps are just unbeatable! Lux Interior is one of the biggest geniuses in rock 'n' roll!
@Spratmac8
@Spratmac8 Месяц назад
Thanks for your kind words Fernando! Yes, The Cramps are one of Rock 'n' Roll's best kept secrets. They influenced so many other bands and also raised the ghosts of forgotten music of the 50s and 60s from the vinyl dungeon. I would love to have Lux and Ivy's record collection!
@fernandomaron87
@fernandomaron87 Месяц назад
​@@Spratmac8wow! That must've been THE collection. I often think about how horror movies were important to punk and psychobilly music, and that in the 50s and early 60s Lux, Ivy, Doyle Wolfgang Von Frankenstein, Glenn Danzig, Dave Vanian and the others were growing up miles and miles apart from each other and watching these B horror and sci-fi, like universal monsters and Ed Wood movies as kids, and it would be a major inspiration for the new musical wave and fashion aesthetics they all helped to create in mid to late 70s.
@Spratmac8
@Spratmac8 Месяц назад
@@fernandomaron87 I think you have really hit on something there Fernando. I had never thought of the B movie genre as being an independent reality that could be inhabited by people from all around the world. When I was young in the late 70s there was a regular Friday night horror/sci-i double bill on UK TV which we eagerly devoured. I think you're right that this shared 'flimic conciousness' meant when punk/goth/psychobilly bands started referencing these movies they all spoke the same language, regardless of where they came from.