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Wall of Voodoo

Wall of Voodoo was an American rock band from Los Angeles, California.[1] Though largely an underground act for the majority of its existence, the band came to prominence when its 1982 single "Mexican Radio" became a hit on MTV and alternative radio. The band was known for surrealist lyrics drawing on iconography of the American southwest.

Wall of Voodoo
Wall of Voodoo, 1982 lineup (left to right): Joe Nanini, Chas T. Gray, Stan Ridgway, Marc Moreland.
Background information
OriginLos Angeles, California, U.S.
Genres
Years active1977–1988
LabelsI.R.S.
Past membersStan Ridgway
Marc Moreland
Bruce Moreland
Chas T. Gray
Joe Nanini
Bill Noland
Andy Prieboy
Ned Leukhardt
Websitewww.wallofvoodoo.net

History edit

Formation edit

Wall of Voodoo had its roots in Acme Soundtracks, a film score business started by Stan Ridgway, later the vocalist and harmonica player for Wall of Voodoo. Acme Soundtracks' office was across the street from the Hollywood punk club The Masque and Ridgway was soon drawn into the emerging punk/new wave scene. Marc Moreland, guitarist for the Skulls, began jamming with Ridgway at the Acme Soundtracks office and the soundtrack company morphed into a new wave band.[2] In 1977, with the addition of Skulls members Bruce Moreland (Marc Moreland's brother) as bassist and Chas T. Gray as keyboardist, along with Joe Nanini, who had been the drummer for the Bags, the Eyes, and Black Randy and the Metrosquad, the first lineup of the band was born,[3] named Wall of Voodoo before their first show in reference to a comment made by Joe Berardi, a friend of Ridgway's and member of the Fibonaccis.[4]

1977–1983 edit

Wall of Voodoo released a self-titled EP in 1980 which featured a synthesizer-driven cover of "Ring of Fire." The second half of "Ring of Fire" features a dissonant guitar solo covering the theme to the 1966 film Our Man Flint. The band's first full-length album, Dark Continent, followed in 1981.[1] Much of the material from this record would feature in live shows over the next few years, such as "Red Light", "Animal Day" and fan favorite "Back In Flesh". Bruce Moreland left the band for the first time soon after this, and Chas Gray performed both bass and synthesizers during this time. The band recorded their biggest-selling album, Call of the West, in 1982. A single, "Mexican Radio," about border blaster radio stations, became an international hit, peaking at #18 in Canada, #21 in New Zealand and #33 in Australia.[5] It also reached #64 in the UK,[6] and was their only Top 100 hit in the United States. As well, the video received considerable exposure on the newly formed MTV.

Bill Noland was added as a keyboardist soon after the release of Call of the West.[3] That same year, Wall of Voodoo opened for the Residents on the cult band's inaugural tour, "the Mole Show," at Perkins Palace in Pasadena, Halloween 1982, and for Devo's ill-fated televised 3-DEVO Concert in October.

Wall of Voodoo opened for Oingo Boingo on their Nothing to Fear tour at the Arlington Theater in Santa Barbara in March 1983. Stan Ridgway claims that the situation around the band was increasingly chaotic during this era, with a great deal of drug use and out-of-control behavior on the part of the band members, as well as shady behavior by the band's management and record label. Wall of Voodoo appeared at the second US Festival on May 28, 1983 (the largest concert the band had performed), immediately after which Ridgway, Nanini, and Noland all left the band.[2] Stan Ridgway soon went on to a successful solo career. He appeared as a guest vocalist on a track on the Rumble Fish score and released his critically acclaimed debut solo album The Big Heat, which included the single "Camouflage", a top ten hit across Europe, in 1986. Joe Nanini soon resurfaced in the country rock band Lonesome Strangers.

1983–1988 edit

The remainder of the band, Marc Moreland, Chas T. Gray and a returning Bruce Moreland, carried on under the name Wall of Voodoo. Soon after, Andy Prieboy, formerly of the San Francisco new wave band Eye Protection, joined as singer and Ned Leukhardt was added as drummer.[1] They issued a UK-only single "Big City" in 1984, and contributed a track to the film Weird Science in 1985. Later that year, they released Seven Days in Sammystown. The first single, "Far Side of Crazy", did well in Australia, reaching number 23 on the ARIA charts. The song is still heard today on the Austereo Triple M network.

In 1987, the band released their fourth studio album, Happy Planet. The album, their second with Andy Prieboy as frontman, saw Call of the West's Richard Mazda returning as producer. Happy Planet spawned another hit in Australia: a cover of the Beach Boys' "Do It Again," which charted at #40 there. The video for the song featured the Beach Boys' own Brian Wilson. Bruce Moreland left the band prior to the subsequent tour. In 1988, Wall of Voodoo split up and Andy Prieboy and Marc Moreland went on to solo careers.

After 1988 edit

In 1989, a post-breakup live album entitled The Ugly Americans in Australia was issued, which documented their 1987 tour of Melbourne, Australia. (Additional performances from a date in Bullhead City, Arizona, were also included.) Stan Ridgway, Andy Prieboy and Marc Moreland all embarked on solo careers throughout the 1990s and 2000s. Joe Nanini released an EP under the name Sienna Nanini in 1996.

Two former members died in the early 2000s: Joe Nanini suffered a brain hemorrhage on December 4, 2000 and Marc Moreland died of kidney and liver failure on March 13, 2002.[7]

On July 18, 2006 a Stan Ridgway-fronted Wall of Voodoo performed at the Pacific Amphitheatre in Orange County as an opening band for Cyndi Lauper.[8] However, other than Ridgway, none of the surviving Wall of Voodoo members were included in this lineup: Joe Berardi and Voodoo producer Richard Mazda performed instead. Ridgway's album Snakebite: Blacktop Ballads and Fugitive Songs (2005), features the narrative song, "Talkin' Wall of Voodoo Blues Pt. 1," a history of the band in song.

A remastered coupling of Dark Continent and Call of the West was released by Raven Records on November 10, 2009.[9][10] On October 2, 2012, Raven issued a companion two-disc set containing all three albums from the Andy Prieboy era (Seven Days in Sammystown, Happy Planet and Ugly Americans in Australia), all remastered, including three bonus tracks.[11]

In 2015 Andy Prieboy stated: "We won’t do a Voodoo reunion without Marc. So until he shows up, sorry, no reunion."[12]

In late 2023 Andy Prieboy and Chas T. Gray launched a website under the name "Wall of Voodoo 2", announcing the upcoming release of recently rediscovered and previously unreleased recordings. These recordings consisted of live recordings, master tracks as well as demos dating back to 1983 when the group consisted of only Gray and Marc Moreland.[13] The first set of recordings, The Lost Tapes Vol. 1, was released on November 25, 2023[14] and featured 11 tracks recorded live during their Happy Planet tour sometime in 1987. Museums: The Lost Tapes Vol. 2 was released on March 15, 2024 and contained 12 demos recorded by Gray and Moreland (as "International Voodoo") sometime after the 1983 US Festival performance. Roughly half of these tracks never made it on any album, the other half consisting of "Big City" and three versions of "Museums" from Seven Days in Sammystown and three versions of "Deep in the Jungle" (from the "Weird Science" soundtrack).

Musical style edit

According to Popdose, the band's sound was shaped by merging Stan Ridgway's "love of bebop and country music" with Marc Moreland's "affection for electronic pioneers such as Kraftwerk".[15] According to AllMusic biographer Jason Ankeny, the band's lyrics were "cinematic narratives -- heavily influenced by Westerns and film noir".[16] Ridgway's vocal style has been described as having a "droll, narcoleptic manner" and the band's music as "atonal, electronically based".[16] According to NPR, the band "weaved [cultural references] like noir [and] Spaghetti Western" with music that was a "tip-of-the-hat to Ennio Morricone".[17] According to Trouser Press, Wall of Voodoo was "Poised uneasily between machine music and rock’n’roll" and the band "embodied the conflict between old and new for the serious-minded: classy Halloween music that’s scary, but pleasantly so."[18] Record Collector magazine described Wall of Voodoo as combining "western Americana motifs with angular art-rock to delicious effect. It was as if stream-of-conscious cowboy movies were being scored by a triumvirate of Sparks, Devo and Talking Heads."[19] Ridgway said, regarding the band's style, "I've always been interested in Phil Spector and his wall-of-sound approach to recording. [The name] Wall of Voodoo seemed to describe best what we were doing."[20] Rolling Stone described Wall of Voodoo as a post-punk band.[21] Reviewer Mark Deming called Wall of Voodoo a new wave band.[22]

Band members edit

Final lineup edit

  • Marc Moreland – guitar (1977–1988; died 2002)
  • Chas T. Gray – keyboards (1977–1988), bass (1982–1985)
  • Bruce Moreland – bass, keyboards (1977–1982, 1985–1988)
  • Andy Prieboy – vocals, keyboards, guitar (1984–1988)
  • Ned Leukhardt – drums, percussion (1984–1988)

Former members edit

  • Stan Ridgway – vocals, harmonica, keyboards, guitar (1977–1983)
  • Joe Nanini – drums, percussion (1977–1983; died 2000)
  • Bill Noland – keyboards (1982–1983)
Timeline

Discography edit

Studio albums edit

Year Title US AUS[23]
1981 Dark Continent 177 -
1982 Call of the West 45 -
1985 Seven Days in Sammystown - 50
1987 Happy Planet - 83

Live albums edit

Year Title US AUS[23]
1989 The Ugly Americans in Australia - -
2023 The Lost Tapes Vol. 1 - -

Compilations edit

  • Granma's House (1984)
  • The Index Masters (includes the Wall of Voodoo EP + bonus live tracks) (1991)
  • Lost Weekend: The Best of the I.R.S. Years (2011) #55 Brazil iTunes Charts [24]
  • Museums: The Lost Tapes Vol. 2 (2024)

Singles edit

Year Title UK[6] CA AUS[23] NZ US US-D US-R
1982 "Ring of Fire" - - - - - - -
1982 "On Interstate 15" - - - - - - -
1983 "Mexican Radio" 64 18 33 21 58 - 41
1983 "Call of the West" - - - - - - -
1983 "There's Nothing on This Side" - - - - - - -
1984 "Big City" - - - - - - -
1985 "Far Side of Crazy" - - 23 - - - -
1987 "Do It Again" - - 40 - - 32 -
1987 "Elvis Bought Dora a Cadillac" - - - - - - -

EPs edit

Year Title UK CA AU NZ US US-D US-R
1980 Wall of Voodoo - - - - 204 - -

Bootlegs edit

  • Take Me to Your Leader: 78-79 Demos (contains early demos from 1978 and 1979)
  • Heaven or Anaheim Demos (all years of the tracks are unknown, but they appear to be demos from the Andy Prieboy era)

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Colin Larkin, ed. (1997). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music (Concise ed.). Virgin Books. p. 1228. ISBN 1-85227-745-9.
  2. ^ a b "Montereycountyweekly.com". Montereycountyweekly.com. Retrieved 2010-12-22.
  3. ^ a b "Wall of Voodoo | Biography & History". AllMusic.
  4. ^ "Non Credo » Joe Berardi". Noncredo.com.
  5. ^ Steffen Hung. "New Zealand charts portal". charts.nz. Retrieved 2014-03-08.
  6. ^ a b Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 590. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
  7. ^ "For The Record: Quick News On Tool, Eminem, Godsmack, Coldplay, Big Daddy Kane, Wall Of Voodoo & More". MTV News.
  8. ^ "You are being redirected..." Pacamp.com.
  9. ^ . 19 October 2012. Archived from the original on 2012-10-19. Retrieved 2 October 2020.
  10. ^ "Raven Records: Wall Of Voodoo". Ravenrecordscomau.melbourneitwebsites.com.
  11. ^ "Seven Days in Sammystown/Happy Planet/Ugly Americans in Australia". Ravenrecordscomau.melbourneitwebsites.com.
  12. ^ "Interview: Andy Prieboy". 24 April 2015.
  13. ^ Prieboy, Andy (November 14, 2023). "THE LOST TAPES or How They Used to Make Records". wallofvoodoo2.com. Retrieved March 14, 2024.
  14. ^ "The Lost Tapes Vol. 1 - Album by Wall of Voodoo 2". Apple Music. Retrieved March 14, 2024.
  15. ^ Holmes, Chris (May 30, 2008). "Wall of Voodoo: An Appreciation". Popdose. Retrieved 2023-01-14.
  16. ^ a b Ankeny, Jason. "Wall of Voodoo Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  17. ^ Patsavas, Alexandra (April 9, 2020). "Combining Film Scores And Pop Rock, Wall Of Voodoo Was Not Just A One-Hit Wonder". NPR. Retrieved 2023-01-14.
  18. ^ Young, John; Ira, Robbins. "Wall of Voodoo". Trouser Press. Retrieved 2023-01-14.
  19. ^ Staunton, Terry (January 15, 2010). "Dark Continent/Call Of The West" (372). Record Collector. Retrieved 2023-01-14. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  20. ^ Young, Jon (July 1983). "Breaking Down the Wall of Voodoo". Trouser Press. Vol. 10, no. 5. New York. p. 16. Retrieved January 1, 2022.
  21. ^ Greene, Andy (8 August 2012). . Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on 2017-04-07. Retrieved 2023-01-14.
  22. ^ Deming, Mark. "Call of the West Review". AllMusic. Retrieved 2022-01-14.
  23. ^ a b c Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 331. ISBN 0-646-11917-6.
  24. ^ "iTunesCharts.net: 'Lost Weekend: The Best of Wall of Voodoo (The I.R.S. Years)' by Wall of Voodoo (International iTunes Chart Performance)". Itunescharts.net. Retrieved 2 October 2020.

External links edit

  • Wall of Voodoo entry at Progrography
  • (archived at Wayback Machine)
  • Stan Ridgway Official website
  • Tangento.net: Wall of Voodoo & the WoV Fan Club
  • Trouser Press entry
  • "Through the Wall: Twenty years after 'Mexican Radio,' Stan Ridgway still finds his own way" by Stuart Thornton, Monterey County Weekly, July 21, 2005.

wall, voodoo, american, rock, band, from, angeles, california, though, largely, underground, majority, existence, band, came, prominence, when, 1982, single, mexican, radio, became, alternative, radio, band, known, surrealist, lyrics, drawing, iconography, ame. Wall of Voodoo was an American rock band from Los Angeles California 1 Though largely an underground act for the majority of its existence the band came to prominence when its 1982 single Mexican Radio became a hit on MTV and alternative radio The band was known for surrealist lyrics drawing on iconography of the American southwest Wall of VoodooWall of Voodoo 1982 lineup left to right Joe Nanini Chas T Gray Stan Ridgway Marc Moreland Background informationOriginLos Angeles California U S GenresPost punknew waveart rockYears active1977 1988LabelsI R S Past membersStan RidgwayMarc MorelandBruce MorelandChas T GrayJoe NaniniBill NolandAndy PrieboyNed LeukhardtWebsitewww wbr wallofvoodoo wbr net Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation 1 2 1977 1983 1 3 1983 1988 1 4 After 1988 2 Musical style 3 Band members 3 1 Final lineup 3 2 Former members 4 Discography 4 1 Studio albums 4 2 Live albums 4 3 Compilations 4 4 Singles 4 5 EPs 4 6 Bootlegs 5 References 6 External linksHistory editFormation edit Wall of Voodoo had its roots in Acme Soundtracks a film score business started by Stan Ridgway later the vocalist and harmonica player for Wall of Voodoo Acme Soundtracks office was across the street from the Hollywood punk club The Masque and Ridgway was soon drawn into the emerging punk new wave scene Marc Moreland guitarist for the Skulls began jamming with Ridgway at the Acme Soundtracks office and the soundtrack company morphed into a new wave band 2 In 1977 with the addition of Skulls members Bruce Moreland Marc Moreland s brother as bassist and Chas T Gray as keyboardist along with Joe Nanini who had been the drummer for the Bags the Eyes and Black Randy and the Metrosquad the first lineup of the band was born 3 named Wall of Voodoo before their first show in reference to a comment made by Joe Berardi a friend of Ridgway s and member of the Fibonaccis 4 1977 1983 edit nbsp Ring of Fire source source Sample of Wall of Voodoo Ring of Fire from Wall of Voodoo EP 1980 Problems playing this file See media help nbsp Mexican Radio source source Sample of Wall of Voodoo Mexican Radio from Call of the West 1982 Problems playing this file See media help nbsp Far Side of Crazy source source Sample of Wall of Voodoo Far Side of Crazy from Seven Days in Sammystown 1985 Problems playing this file See media help Wall of Voodoo released a self titled EP in 1980 which featured a synthesizer driven cover of Ring of Fire The second half of Ring of Fire features a dissonant guitar solo covering the theme to the 1966 film Our Man Flint The band s first full length album Dark Continent followed in 1981 1 Much of the material from this record would feature in live shows over the next few years such as Red Light Animal Day and fan favorite Back In Flesh Bruce Moreland left the band for the first time soon after this and Chas Gray performed both bass and synthesizers during this time The band recorded their biggest selling album Call of the West in 1982 A single Mexican Radio about border blaster radio stations became an international hit peaking at 18 in Canada 21 in New Zealand and 33 in Australia 5 It also reached 64 in the UK 6 and was their only Top 100 hit in the United States As well the video received considerable exposure on the newly formed MTV Bill Noland was added as a keyboardist soon after the release of Call of the West 3 That same year Wall of Voodoo opened for the Residents on the cult band s inaugural tour the Mole Show at Perkins Palace in Pasadena Halloween 1982 and for Devo s ill fated televised 3 DEVO Concert in October Wall of Voodoo opened for Oingo Boingo on their Nothing to Fear tour at the Arlington Theater in Santa Barbara in March 1983 Stan Ridgway claims that the situation around the band was increasingly chaotic during this era with a great deal of drug use and out of control behavior on the part of the band members as well as shady behavior by the band s management and record label Wall of Voodoo appeared at the second US Festival on May 28 1983 the largest concert the band had performed immediately after which Ridgway Nanini and Noland all left the band 2 Stan Ridgway soon went on to a successful solo career He appeared as a guest vocalist on a track on the Rumble Fish score and released his critically acclaimed debut solo album The Big Heat which included the single Camouflage a top ten hit across Europe in 1986 Joe Nanini soon resurfaced in the country rock band Lonesome Strangers 1983 1988 edit The remainder of the band Marc Moreland Chas T Gray and a returning Bruce Moreland carried on under the name Wall of Voodoo Soon after Andy Prieboy formerly of the San Francisco new wave band Eye Protection joined as singer and Ned Leukhardt was added as drummer 1 They issued a UK only single Big City in 1984 and contributed a track to the film Weird Science in 1985 Later that year they released Seven Days in Sammystown The first single Far Side of Crazy did well in Australia reaching number 23 on the ARIA charts The song is still heard today on the Austereo Triple M network In 1987 the band released their fourth studio album Happy Planet The album their second with Andy Prieboy as frontman saw Call of the West s Richard Mazda returning as producer Happy Planet spawned another hit in Australia a cover of the Beach Boys Do It Again which charted at 40 there The video for the song featured the Beach Boys own Brian Wilson Bruce Moreland left the band prior to the subsequent tour In 1988 Wall of Voodoo split up and Andy Prieboy and Marc Moreland went on to solo careers After 1988 edit In 1989 a post breakup live album entitled The Ugly Americans in Australia was issued which documented their 1987 tour of Melbourne Australia Additional performances from a date in Bullhead City Arizona were also included Stan Ridgway Andy Prieboy and Marc Moreland all embarked on solo careers throughout the 1990s and 2000s Joe Nanini released an EP under the name Sienna Nanini in 1996 Two former members died in the early 2000s Joe Nanini suffered a brain hemorrhage on December 4 2000 and Marc Moreland died of kidney and liver failure on March 13 2002 7 On July 18 2006 a Stan Ridgway fronted Wall of Voodoo performed at the Pacific Amphitheatre in Orange County as an opening band for Cyndi Lauper 8 However other than Ridgway none of the surviving Wall of Voodoo members were included in this lineup Joe Berardi and Voodoo producer Richard Mazda performed instead Ridgway s album Snakebite Blacktop Ballads and Fugitive Songs 2005 features the narrative song Talkin Wall of Voodoo Blues Pt 1 a history of the band in song A remastered coupling of Dark Continent and Call of the West was released by Raven Records on November 10 2009 9 10 On October 2 2012 Raven issued a companion two disc set containing all three albums from the Andy Prieboy era Seven Days in Sammystown Happy Planet and Ugly Americans in Australia all remastered including three bonus tracks 11 In 2015 Andy Prieboy stated We won t do a Voodoo reunion without Marc So until he shows up sorry no reunion 12 In late 2023 Andy Prieboy and Chas T Gray launched a website under the name Wall of Voodoo 2 announcing the upcoming release of recently rediscovered and previously unreleased recordings These recordings consisted of live recordings master tracks as well as demos dating back to 1983 when the group consisted of only Gray and Marc Moreland 13 The first set of recordings The Lost Tapes Vol 1 was released on November 25 2023 14 and featured 11 tracks recorded live during their Happy Planet tour sometime in 1987 Museums The Lost Tapes Vol 2 was released on March 15 2024 and contained 12 demos recorded by Gray and Moreland as International Voodoo sometime after the 1983 US Festival performance Roughly half of these tracks never made it on any album the other half consisting of Big City and three versions of Museums from Seven Days in Sammystown and three versions of Deep in the Jungle from the Weird Science soundtrack Musical style editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it January 2023 According to Popdose the band s sound was shaped by merging Stan Ridgway s love of bebop and country music with Marc Moreland s affection for electronic pioneers such as Kraftwerk 15 According to AllMusic biographer Jason Ankeny the band s lyrics were cinematic narratives heavily influenced by Westerns and film noir 16 Ridgway s vocal style has been described as having a droll narcoleptic manner and the band s music as atonal electronically based 16 According to NPR the band weaved cultural references like noir and Spaghetti Western with music that was a tip of the hat to Ennio Morricone 17 According to Trouser Press Wall of Voodoo was Poised uneasily between machine music and rock n roll and the band embodied the conflict between old and new for the serious minded classy Halloween music that s scary but pleasantly so 18 Record Collector magazine described Wall of Voodoo as combining western Americana motifs with angular art rock to delicious effect It was as if stream of conscious cowboy movies were being scored by a triumvirate of Sparks Devo and Talking Heads 19 Ridgway said regarding the band s style I ve always been interested in Phil Spector and his wall of sound approach to recording The name Wall of Voodoo seemed to describe best what we were doing 20 Rolling Stone described Wall of Voodoo as a post punk band 21 Reviewer Mark Deming called Wall of Voodoo a new wave band 22 Band members editFinal lineup edit Marc Moreland guitar 1977 1988 died 2002 Chas T Gray keyboards 1977 1988 bass 1982 1985 Bruce Moreland bass keyboards 1977 1982 1985 1988 Andy Prieboy vocals keyboards guitar 1984 1988 Ned Leukhardt drums percussion 1984 1988 Former members edit Stan Ridgway vocals harmonica keyboards guitar 1977 1983 Joe Nanini drums percussion 1977 1983 died 2000 Bill Noland keyboards 1982 1983 TimelineDiscography editStudio albums edit Year Title US AUS 23 1981 Dark Continent 177 1982 Call of the West 45 1985 Seven Days in Sammystown 50 1987 Happy Planet 83 Live albums edit Year Title US AUS 23 1989 The Ugly Americans in Australia 2023 The Lost Tapes Vol 1 Compilations edit Granma s House 1984 The Index Masters includes the Wall of Voodoo EP bonus live tracks 1991 Lost Weekend The Best of the I R S Years 2011 55 Brazil iTunes Charts 24 Museums The Lost Tapes Vol 2 2024 Singles edit Year Title UK 6 CA AUS 23 NZ US US D US R 1982 Ring of Fire 1982 On Interstate 15 1983 Mexican Radio 64 18 33 21 58 41 1983 Call of the West 1983 There s Nothing on This Side 1984 Big City 1985 Far Side of Crazy 23 1987 Do It Again 40 32 1987 Elvis Bought Dora a Cadillac EPs edit Year Title UK CA AU NZ US US D US R 1980 Wall of Voodoo 204 Bootlegs edit Take Me to Your Leader 78 79 Demos contains early demos from 1978 and 1979 Heaven or Anaheim Demos all years of the tracks are unknown but they appear to be demos from the Andy Prieboy era References edit a b c Colin Larkin ed 1997 The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music Concise ed Virgin Books p 1228 ISBN 1 85227 745 9 a b Montereycountyweekly com Montereycountyweekly com Retrieved 2010 12 22 a b Wall of Voodoo Biography amp History AllMusic Non Credo Joe Berardi Noncredo com Steffen Hung New Zealand charts portal charts nz Retrieved 2014 03 08 a b Roberts David 2006 British Hit Singles amp Albums 19th ed London Guinness World Records Limited p 590 ISBN 1 904994 10 5 For The Record Quick News On Tool Eminem Godsmack Coldplay Big Daddy Kane Wall Of Voodoo amp More MTV News You are being redirected Pacamp com Dark Continent Call Of The West 2 for 1 CD amp DVD Music Music Genres Pop Rock JB HI FI 19 October 2012 Archived from the original on 2012 10 19 Retrieved 2 October 2020 Raven Records Wall Of Voodoo Ravenrecordscomau melbourneitwebsites com Seven Days in Sammystown Happy Planet Ugly Americans in Australia Ravenrecordscomau melbourneitwebsites com Interview Andy Prieboy 24 April 2015 Prieboy Andy November 14 2023 THE LOST TAPES or How They Used to Make Records wallofvoodoo2 com Retrieved March 14 2024 The Lost Tapes Vol 1 Album by Wall of Voodoo 2 Apple Music Retrieved March 14 2024 Holmes Chris May 30 2008 Wall of Voodoo An Appreciation Popdose Retrieved 2023 01 14 a b Ankeny Jason Wall of Voodoo Biography AllMusic Retrieved 2022 01 14 Patsavas Alexandra April 9 2020 Combining Film Scores And Pop Rock Wall Of Voodoo Was Not Just A One Hit Wonder NPR Retrieved 2023 01 14 Young John Ira Robbins Wall of Voodoo Trouser Press Retrieved 2023 01 14 Staunton Terry January 15 2010 Dark Continent Call Of The West 372 Record Collector Retrieved 2023 01 14 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Young Jon July 1983 Breaking Down the Wall of Voodoo Trouser Press Vol 10 no 5 New York p 16 Retrieved January 1 2022 Greene Andy 8 August 2012 Where Are They Now 1982 s Biggest Pop Acts gt Wall of Voodoo Rolling Stone Archived from the original on 2017 04 07 Retrieved 2023 01 14 Deming Mark Call of the West Review AllMusic Retrieved 2022 01 14 a b c Kent David 1993 Australian Chart Book 1970 1992 illustrated ed St Ives N S W Australian Chart Book p 331 ISBN 0 646 11917 6 iTunesCharts net Lost Weekend The Best of Wall of Voodoo The I R S Years by Wall of Voodoo International iTunes Chart Performance Itunescharts net Retrieved 2 October 2020 External links editWall of Voodoo entry at Progrography JTL s Wall of Voodoo website archived at Wayback Machine Stan Ridgway Official website Tangento net Wall of Voodoo amp the WoV Fan Club Trouser Press entry Through the Wall Twenty years after Mexican Radio Stan Ridgway still finds his own way by Stuart Thornton Monterey County Weekly July 21 2005 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wall of Voodoo amp oldid 1221587538, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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