• Two Thousand Maniacs

    Two Thousand Maniacs is the 1964 follow up to Blood Feast by Herschell Gordon Lewis, ‘the godfather of gore’. One of the earliest examples of hicksploitation films, it was lauded by Lux Interior of The Cramps as an all-time great. It performed well in drive-in theaters despite being heavily cut down from Lewis’ abundant use of bright red blood, cannibalism, and torture with attention to detail and an over the top approach. This formula would establish itself as a classic in horror films to come, such as Texas Chainsaw Massacre, and attracted the admiration of a new generation of filmmakers like John Waters.

  • The Cramps

    Formed in Akron Ohio in the middle 1970s, Lux Interior and Poison Ivy bonded over their mutual love of music and movie culture. They would relocate to New York City in the early days of the punk movement alongside fellow Ohioans The Dead Boys. Other members would include drummers Bryan Gregory (Beast) during their New York era, followed by Kid Congo Powers (The Gun Club, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds, Divine Horsemen, Angels of Light, Die Haut) who would join them when they settled in Los Angeles. Nick Knox served on the drums after Congo’s departure.

    Lux Interior passed away February 4, 2009.

    Links:

    Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cramps
    Discogs.com: https://www.discogs.com/artist/39779-The-Cramps

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