Halloween music playlist: Scary, spooky songs for the horror season
If you need some Halloween-themed tracks to fill out your iPod library, here are a few suggestions. You can download these tunes in handy MP3 form via Amazon.com and enjoy them at an upcoming costume party or hayride, use them as background music for your haunted house or trick-or-treat display, or relax with them while you’re pumpkin-carving or lost in a corn maze. Please take care, however, to remove your earbuds when bobbing for apples.
“Tubular Bells” (theme from The Exorcist) by Mike Oldfield — A right-sized (4:17) version of Oldfield’s 1973 opus, made famous as the theme from one of the scariest movies ever made. For me, this melody is forever linked with those foreboding autumn leaves blowing through the streets of Georgetown — an eerie and ominous October Angelus.
“Experiment In Terror” by Henry Mancini &mdash One of these days, I want to see this 1962 Blake Edwards film starring Glenn Ford and Lee Remick.
Instead, I’m familiar with “Experiment in Terror” as the theme song from Creature Features, the early-1970s WGN-TV Saturday night movie show which screened mostly Universal Monsters films like Frankenstein, Dracula, The Wolfman, and The Mummy. No actual recordings of the Creature Features opening are known to exist, but the sequence is recreated faithfully above.
“Falling” (theme from Twin Peaks) by Julee Cruise — A very similar bass sound is used in the Angelo Badalamenti theme for David Lynch’s hair-raising ABC-TV series Twin Peaks. Lynch’s lyrics are not heard under the opening credits, but Julee Cruise did perform”Falling” in the pilot, and her sweet, ethereal vocals add another layer of goosebumps to the haunting refrain.
“Funeral March of a Marionette” (Charles Gounod), performed by Mary Gifford — There are countless recordings of this famous theme from Alfred Hitchcock Presents, but I especially like this one, featuring the Steere and Turner Organ of the Greenstone United Methodist Church in Chicago’s historic Pullman District. There’s a subtle creepiness to the sound of the solo organ and the ambiance of the church which really enhances this requiem for a puppet.
Toccata and Fugue in D Minor, BWV 565 (J.S. Bach) performed by Ton Koopman — Of course, the organ can be bloodcurdling as well, and Ton Koopman pulls out all the stops in this awesome rendition of one of the most well-known organ works of all time.
“Monster Mash” by Bobby “Boris” Pickett — A Halloween favorite since its release in October 1962, “Monster Mash” shows just how far a basic four-chord progression and a Boris Karloff impression can take you. Trivia: Leon Russell (“Tight Rope”) is one of “The Crypt-Kickers” backing Pickett on the original recording.
“Dancing With Mr D” by The Rolling Stones — Here’s an even more macabre dance party: A graveyard do-si-do with the Grim Reaper himself, opening the Stones’ 1973 Goats Head Soup album. 36 years later, Keith Richards is still going strong.
“My Father’s House” by Bruce Springsteen — Springsteen’s whole Nebraska album is one of my all-time October favorites. It distills a bleakness that perfectly suits the autumn chill and a landscape that’s losing its foliage. While the title track is about a killing spree and “State Trooper” is a terrifying ride, the nightmare of “My Father’s House” tops them both with its intimate and matter-of-fact desolation.
Last year, in lieu of hosting a trick-or-treat that had grown out of control, Springsteen released a special Halloween song and video: “A Night with the Jersey Devil.” For all of its Howlin’ Wolf-style menace, it was nowhere near as frightening as Nebraska
Got a few harrowing hits of your own to recommend? Please add them in a comment below.


PHANTASM is the horror shocker that started it all.
Michael Baldwin and Bill Thornbury star as two brothers who discover that their local mortuary hides a legion of hooded killer dwarf-creatures, a flying silver sphere of death, and is home to the sinister mortician known only as the Tall Man. This nefarious undertaker (with an iconic performance by Angus Scrimm) enslaves the souls of the damned and in the process his character has entered the pantheon of classic horror villains. Directed by: Don Coscarelli
link
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3ieQxm_M2I
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