Music

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Music to Make Horror Movies By: Leona Anderson, “Rats in my Room”

Published March 24, 2013 by biggayhorrorfan

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There are plenty of things Big Gay Horror Fan can put up with in his apartment – that monster in the closet (worse than 1000 Catholic priests) and the corpses of long dead lovers? Those provide a mere piffle of annoyance. But, rats in my room?!? Never!!!!

Thankfully, the glorious Leona Anderson, best known to horror geeks as Mrs. Slydes – the truly creepy blind caretaker in the original House on Haunted Hill, agrees with me! Just pay aural witness to the impressive track “Rats in My Room” from her gloriously awful album Music to Suffer By, below, and you’ll know why.

It seems the eclectic Ms. Anderson actually did study opera courtesy of her famous older brother (filmdom’s original Bronco Billy), so her depth filled caterwauling on such premium MTSB tracks as “Limburger Lover” and “Hep Cat” is obviously just a put-on. Or — was it???

Ponder that until the next time!! – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan

Music to Make Horror Films By: The Crystal Ark, “We Came To”

Published March 17, 2013 by biggayhorrorfan

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Every time that Big Gay Horror Fan and Apocalyptic Kitten get on board our velvet infused space ship disaster occurs! Thankfully, awesome synth-dance-mood-pop group The Crystal Ark have a better command of sexy space travel as witnessed by their cool science fiction inspired video for “We Came To”.

It comes as no surprise that The Crystal Ark’s founding members Gavin Russom (LCD Sound System)and Viva Ruiz are huge horror fans. Ruiz is even the proud creator of awesome horror short Monja Satanica. Ruiz’s lyrics also deal with the proud legacy of immigrants, a situation that “We Came To” seems to beautifully encapsulate.

Be sure to keep up with the alien like majesty of the Crystal Ark at:
http://www.facebook.com/TheCrystalArk

Big Gay Horror Fan is always floating around at https://www.facebook.com/biggayhorrorfan, as well.

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

Music to Make Horror Films By: Scary Cherry and the Bang Bangs – “Don’t Wanna” Video

Published March 11, 2013 by biggayhorrorfan

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The tons of things Big Gay Horror Fan doesn’t want to do on a daily basis (finding errant love on street corners, cleaning his building manager’s piranha tank) could break his back! But, after watching the fun ‘n propulsive “Don’t Wanna” video by the electric Scary Cherry and the Bang Bangs, all I know is I want to dive into a Meat Pie right now AND purchase this awesome group’s upcoming full length, Girl, the moment it comes out.

Lead by the amazing Lezlie Deane (Freddy’s Dead, 976-Evil), Scary Cherry are definitely worth their weight in femme on femme cream pie wrestling!

Be sure to keep up with all the glitter and mad monster jams at http://www.scarycherry.com.

And until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan

Music to Make Horror Films By: My Gold Mask -“Burn Like the Sun”, Leave Me Midnight

Published March 3, 2013 by biggayhorrorfan

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Big Gay Horror Fan is usually left out in the cold wearing nothing but a t-shirt and sparkled thong! But, this past New Years Eve he was feeling the heat – as one of the lucky Midwest residents witnessing My Gold Mask’s awesome preview of their giallo inspired offering Leave Me Midnight!

Spooky, kinky and layered with haunting atmosphere, Leave Me Midnight is now available to the lucky public at large.

You can get a taste of its glorious essence with this video to magnetic track “Burn Like the Sun”:

Meanwhile, you can keep up with My Gold Mask and purchase Leave Me Midnight by visiting:
www.mygoldmask.com and http://www.facebook.com/#!/mygoldmask!

Big Gay Horror Fan is always getting his velvet groove on at http://www.facebook.com/#!/BigGayHorrorFan, as well!

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

Music to Make Horror Films By: Legions of Raum and Menophobia!

Published February 24, 2013 by biggayhorrorfan

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Every morning, Big Gay Horror Fan’s creature-in-arms Deadly Johnson looks into the mirror and challenges the many demons that haunt him. Of course, the sounds that emerge from that confrontation are ear shatteringly monstrous, but perhaps nowhere near the beautiful onslaught of such powerful fright based bands as Legions of Raum and Menophobia!

legions of raumIndeed, the slavishly pleasing Legions of Raum have a propulsive track roaring over the closing credits of body choppingly funny short The Leaf Blower Massacre. You can, also, keep up with their activity at http://www.facebook.com/#!/legionsofraum.

Menophobia, meanwhile, layer their pounding blasts of terror rock with distinctive layers and mood altering guitar chords. Their live show comes complete with scare costumes and a great interplay between the band members. Be sure to give them a glance at http://www.facebook.com/#!/Menophobia, as well.009

Meanwhile, Big Gay Horror Fan is always accepting hard loving fright musicians of all sorts at http://www.facebook.com/#!/BigGayHorrorFan, too!

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

Menophobia rocking a recent Midwest show, hosted by Jason #1, Ari Lehmen!

Menophobia rocking a recent Midwest show, hosted by Jason #1, Ari Lehmen!

Gregg Marx: From the Strangler’s Favorite Son to Cole Porter!

Published February 14, 2013 by biggayhorrorfan

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Big Gay Horror Fan spent his youth imagining he was a male version of The Young and the Restless’ Nikki, pursued by slobbering, wild eyed psychopaths with swarthy, rescue minded studs in hot pursuit. Then he was attacked by that Shakespeare quoting, green armed arsonist his freshmen year of college and being the dude in distress no longer seemed like such fun!

Meanwhile, multi-talented performer Gregg Marx spent his young adulthood enacting terror stricken plotlines as David Banning on Days of Our Lives (1981-1983). With its Salem Strangler, Salem Slasher and devil possession plotlines, Days proved, without a doubt, the correlation between daytime dramas and horror films.

Now, though, Marx has found success with his true love – singing. On the eve of bringing his tribute to Cole Porter to the Midwest, this genial entertainer agreed to chat about Porter (and his horrific struggles with pain) and his muse, 40’s genre icon Patricia Morison (Calling Dr. Death, Dressed to Kill). Of course, we also engaged in some chatter about his days in Salem when David Banning was the #1 most wanted, for more reasons than one!

BGHF: Hey, Gregg! I know we’re gonna talk about sophisticated stuff, so I’m hoping its okay that I’m not dressed in a tux or what-have-you.

Gregg: You’re not?!?

BGHF: No. I guess I’m a bit too punk rock for that.

Gregg: (laughs) You’re punk rock and we’re talking about Cole Porter!?

BGHF: C’mon! Cole Porter was totally punk! Just like Kurt Weill, Noel Coward and Lorenz Hart – all those guys! Besides, everybody loves Cole Porter!

Cole+Porter+pngGregg: I know! I’ll say I’m doing a Cole Porter show and everybody says, “Oh, I love Cole Porter!” I think it’s obviously an individual thing for everybody. But for me I think, musically, he was brilliant. But, also no one wrote songs the way he wrote songs. The lyric and music together – he was just unique. And I think you’re right – he was a little bit punk for his time. He was breaking boundaries. He was definitely saying things in ways that I’m sure polite society was a little bit taken aback by. So maybe I like that –

BGHF: -The naughtiness?

Gregg: Well, the well dressed renegade, you know. – And the naughtiness, too, yeah. He did it with such class -and panache. This is a digression, but it was really fun for me. I live in LA and a friend of mine is also a singer who has a friend who is very good friends with a woman named Patricia Morison.

BGHF: I love her!

Gregg: You know her?

BGHF: She did tons of genre films in Hollywood in the 30’s and 40’s. Inner Sanctum, Sherlock Holmes, jungle flicks – she’s amazing! From what I gather, Hollywood didn’t quite know what to do with her and Porter kind of gave her a foundation.calling-dr-death-patricia-morison-j-everett

Gregg: I knew that she had been Cole Porter’s pick to play on Broadway when they had done Kiss Me Kate. My friend said she’s 97 years old and she is still very vital and asked me if I wanted to meet her. So, we went over for an afternoon. We brought her cookies, which she loved, and we had tea with Patricia Morison! She lives in this high rise in a beautiful building. But I don’t think I looked out the window once because on this table is a picture from Cole Porter autographed to her – and here’s another letter from Cole Porter over there! She brought out these two photo albums when she was with Alfred Drake in Kiss Me Kate and with so and so and this person or that one. She was still stunningly beautiful and it was just literally like opening up a history book. I’ve always thought it would be such fun to hang with Cole Porter and this way I got the next best thing. It was quite extraordinary. I felt like I was literally with a living piece of history! Because she was there, man! It was great.

BGHF: Totally! One thing I found interesting was that due to a tragic accident, Porter lived much of his adult life in immense pain, but he created so much.

Gregg: He wrote over 1000 songs!

BGHF: Of course, they finally amputated the problem leg, later on in his life. I read that Noel Coward saw Porter’s physical relief and thought he would enter into his greatest period of writing. But he never really wrote again. One theory is that his sense of vanity was so crushed that he was unable to create.

photo (5)Gregg: Who knows what was in his heart? I remember reading when he had that horseback riding accident, the doctors wanted to amputate then – this was a lot earlier in his life – and Linda (his wife) and his friends said absolutely not! It will kill him. It’ll kill his writing. So, they forestalled that and he went through all those years and years of pain and suffering. But, when they actually did, he apparently became literally so depressed – and I think Linda was gone at that point, as well, or no – close, she died after. But, still, I wouldn’t call it vanity. Maybe it was. It certainly seems that the life was taken out of him. Although, I think he kind of rallied, but I don’t think he wrote much at all afterwards – certainly nothing of note after that. The book that I read, a wonderful biography of him, described how people would come over for dinner and he just kind-of retreated into himself, I think. So, who knows? But try to put yourself in that position. Especially for someone who was very vital and — (laughs) who liked having young men to party with! It seems like it was a huge shift in his life that took a lot out of him – including his desire to write.

BGHF: Interesting. So, I know this is probably an impossible question – do you have a song or songs that you like to sing the most by Porter?

Gregg: Wow. There are a number of them. The very first song by Cole Porter that I learned was “Night and Day”. I have a very soft spot for that. Actually, it was a song that I made some breakthroughs as a singer just by tackling the material. So that one is very close to my heart. I, also, love “Just One of Those Things”. I love what he does with it, and so many songs. It’s this combination of wit and beauty and pathos. Also, I’d have to say “In the Still of the Night”. It’s far less jaunty than the others, but is stunningly beautiful – and simple. And deep, in a way, too. Those are three. There’s not one. I always dread it when someone says what’s your favorite —-. Who’s your favorite singer, you know. Well – God! If I were on a desert island who would I want serenading me? Well, okay. I’ll try figuring that one.

BGHF: Maybe you could have Susan Seaforth and Bill Hayes serenading you!

Gregg: (Laughs) Oh, I miss them. I haven’t talked to them in so long.

dayscastJan1982BGHF: Well, that was my none too subtle way of bringing us into your Days of Our Lives era! In an interview last year Barbara Crampton (Chopping Mall, ReAnimator, From Beyond), who has done tons of soaps and horror films including Days, noted that there was a huge crossover audience between the two genres. I think the time you spent on Days is a perfect example why. David Banning was accused of murder every other month it seems like!

Gregg: (laughs) Yeah, really.

BGHF: So many of the plotlines had horror angles, as well. The Salem Strangler, whom your character was accused of being at one point, especially.

Gregg: Oh, my god, that’s right.

BGHF: So what are your memories of that time? Is there anything that stands out?

Gregg: For me, other than a couple little commercial things I had done, that was my very first job. So, I was learning as I went. That was training on the job! I had not planned to be an actor at all. I had planned to be a lawyer. I sort of shifted gears right out of college. And it all happened relatively quickly. So, I was really soaking up things – hitting my mark, where is the light, where is my camera, what are my lines…It was a great experience, but it was really consuming. And the storylines on soap operas – especially at that time – were pretty preposterous. So, you just kind of had to go with it and learn how to justify it in your character’s and in your own heart and soul and brain. It was also a lot of fun because it certainly wasn’t boring, you know, like you mentioned the Salem Strangler. Also, I remember that not that long before I joined the show Bill and Susan were on the cover of Time Magazine. So, they were really soap opera royalty in a time when soap operas were huge! So, to be swept into that family and that world was really kind of heady. It was very exciting for me – and a little overwhelming at times, too. gregg marx

BGHF: You worked with some amazing woman on that show, as well: Patty Weaver (Twisted Sister’s “We’re Not Gonna Take It!”), Philece Sampler (The Incredible Hulk, live and animated) and poor Brenda Benet (The Terror at 37,000 Feet, countless classic television shows like The Girl From U.N.C.L.E. and I Dream Of Jeannie).

Gregg: So, you really know that time. When Brenda committed suicide that really rocked the world of our show. I don’t know if we ever really totally recovered from it. It was pretty intense. And Philece and I remain friends to this day. I see her every once in awhile. We have a really great friendship. I haven’t seen Patty Weaver in a long time. But we were really, really tight. When you think about it, it was a great time. I ended up enjoying my time on As The World Turns more as an actor because I had the experience of Days and I was more mature as an actor. I was able to work on a level that I hadn’t been able to when I was on Days – just by virtue of experience and time. But, both of them were very extraordinary experiences that I don’t take for granted.

BGHF: Just like we don’t take all the joy you’ve given us for granted, either!

Gregg: Why – thanks!

BGHF: Although, I don’t know if Alex Marshall would agree!

Check out a clip from Day’s Salem Strangler escapades (featuring Marx, Benet and Sampler) here:

Marx, meanwhile, will be in Chicago on February 14th and 15th, 2013 doing his amazing cabaret show at Davenports (www.davenportspianobar.com), 1383 N. Milwaukee. Tickets are $20 with a two drink minimum – with a 2 for 1 being offered on the 14th for Valentine’s Day revelers.

Big Gay Horror is always welcoming handsome accused murderers at http://www.facebook.com/#!/BigGayHorrorFan, as well.

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

Music to Make Horror Movies By: Kyle Greer and the Closet – Skeleton Key

Published February 11, 2013 by biggayhorrorfan

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Finances crumble, friendships topple and the nuns of the apocalypse escape from their velvet tombs – but in Big Gay Horror Fan’s world there is always one solace filled constant – music!

Of course, it’s even better when our favorite tunes contain small quirks of horror. Eclectic piano pop maestro Kyle Greer’s Skeleton Key EP is one such work.

Sprinkled with small tastes of gothic and the macabre, this work is layered with cascading musical variations on such propulsive tunes as Loverboy for Louisa and Dogkiller. Meanwhile, Little Arsonist would fit perfectly in a comedy about dysfunctional serial killers or coming out of the speakers of a party van in the latest retro-slasher.

perkinsReaching dramatically, into the highest levels of his vocal register, Greer’s penultimate moment here is the fun, sweetly beautiful Mother. A ballad song in the voice of Norman Bates, this is musical theatre and arch comedy at its finest. Let’s hope Greer has a whole Psycho musical up his white and black colored sleeves.

To find more about Kyle and to purchase Skeleton Key be sure to visit www.kylegreerrocks.com!

Big Gay Horror Fan, meanwhile, is always busy exploring the film oeuvre of Anthony Perkins at http://www.facebook.com/#!/BigGayHorrorFan, as well.

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

Music to Make Horror Movies By: Midge Ure and the Class of 1999!

Published February 3, 2013 by biggayhorrorfan

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There is something that Big Gay Horror Fan truly loves about this existence: you can find a little horror connection in everything.

Take New Wave musician Midge Ure, for example. Best known as the lead singer of Ultravox with whom he scored such hits as “Dancing with Tears in My Eyes,” and “Love’s Grand Adventure,” Ure has recently completed a highly professional, truly nostalgic mini US tour (as seen above).

Class_of_1999And while his most popular songs have endeared him primarily to the tear streaked mascara set, lovers of low budget sci-fi and horror are also (perhaps unknowingly) familiar with Ure due to his groovily propulsive closing credits track for 1990 genre hybrid Class of 1999.

Here an eagerly talented fan (billed as ‘halfdude’ – love it!) has edited cover art and stills from flick, which features such genre regulars as Stacy Keach, Malcolm McDowell, Traci Lin and Pam Grier, into a nicely evocative, extremely pulpy video:

Big Gay Horror Fan, meanwhile, is always reliving his musical youth at http://www.facebook.com/#!/BigGayHorrorFan, as well!

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

Music to Make Horror Films By: Lezlie Deane and Scary Cherry and the Bang Bangs!

Published January 27, 2013 by biggayhorrorfan

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There is little that can make Big Gay Horror Fan feel sexy in the winter – especially one where the excessive wind chill causes his toes to chronically freeze. But leave it to sassy terror stalwart Lezlie Deane (976-Evil, Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare) and her exuberant rock band Scary Cherry and the Bang Bangs to stir up the heat with a teaser for their latest song Girl.

Be sure to thall out all your appendages by checking this hot little number out at:

Meanwhile, you can keep up to date with all of Deane’s rocking activity at:http://www.youtube.com/user/scarycherrybangbang and
http://www.facebook.com/#!/scarycherry, too.
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Be sure to increase your body temperature by checking out Big Gay Horror Fan at http://www.facebook.com/#!/BigGayHorrorFan, as well!

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!

Music to Make Horror Movies By: Dirty Sanchez – “Really Rich Italian Satanists”

Published January 20, 2013 by biggayhorrorfan

antonio says
Big Gay Horror Fan spent the majority of his country based youth cowering under (the occasional) street lamp, sure that every passing car contained a demented hillbilly matriarch with kidnapping on her mind. Oh, the true (toothless) terror!

Of course, getting snatched by a smooth devil worshipping cult may have been an altogether different story – as witnessed by Dirty Sanchez’s awesome Really Rich Italian Satanists. Co-founded by the legendary Jackie Beat (Gingerdead Man III), Mario Diaz and DJ BARBEAU (how appropriate!) in Los Angeles in 2001, this terror-ific tune is one of the slinky trio’s best. Check it here:

You can keep up with all the fabulous Jackie Beat has to offer at www.missjackiebeat.com.

Big Gay Horror Fan, meanwhile, is always cavorting with blood thirsty Europeans at http://www.facebook.com/#!/BigGayHorrorFan.

Until the next time – SWEET love and pink GRUE, Big Gay Horror Fan!