Description
TRACKLISTING:
- Satan Takes a Holiday – written in 1937 by bandleader Larry Clinton. Arranged for Hammond Novacord. Originally used as background music for “magic acts and midnight spook shows”.
- Answer Me – A German love song from 1953 by Gerhard Winkler and Fred Rauch, with a translation by Carl Sigman. Vocal by A. LaVey.
- The Whirling Dervish – Written in 1938 by Harry Warren and Al Dubin for the film Garden of the Moon.
- Chloe, or the Song of the Swamp – Written by Gus Kahn and Neil Moret in 1927. This is a tale of lost love told from the perspective of the abandoned one. Vocal by N. Bougas.
- Thine Alone – Bombastic version of a 1917 piece by Victor Herbert and Henry Blossom, for stage show, called Eileen.
- Golden Earrings – Written by Jay Livingston and Ray Evans for the film of the same name, starring Marlene Dietrich. Vocal by A. LaVey, credited as “The Tipsy Gypsy”.
- The More I See You – Written by Harry Warden with words by Mack Gordon. Vocal by N. Bougas.
- Band Organ Medley
- Money in My Clothes – A 1934 song written by Irving Kahal and Sammy Fain.
- Taboo – 1941 piece by M. Lecuona.
- Giovanni – Standard Band Organ Waltz composer and date unknown
- Yankee Rose – by Abe Frankel and Sidney Holden, written in 1926.
- Hello, Central, Give Me No Man’s Land – Written by Sam L. Lewis, Joe Young, and Jean Schwartz about a young boy trying to use the telephone to talk to his father who’s been killed in the war. Vocal by A. LaVey
- Blue Prelude – 1933 suicide song by Gordon Jenkins and Joe Bishop. Vocal by B. Barton.
- Softly, as in a Morning Sunrise – By Sigmund Romberg and Oscar Hammerstein II, for the 1928 operetta, “The New Moon”. A song about love’s betrayal. Vocal by N. Bougas.
- Honolulu Baby – Written by T. Marvin Hatley in 1933 as background music for the Laurel and Hardy comedy, Sons of the Desert. Vocal by A. LaVey.
- Variations on the Mooche – Written by Duke Ellington and Irving Mills, 1928 and favored by exotic dancers.
- Here Lies Love – Suicide song written by Leo Robin and Ralph Rainger for the 1933 film, The Big Broadcast. Vocal by N. Bougas.
- Dixie – Written by Daniel Emmett in 1860. Vocal by N. Bougas.
- If You Were the Only Girl in the World – By Nat D. Ayer and Clifford Grey, 1916. Vocal by A. LaVey.
- Satan Takes a Holiday (reprise) – Vocal treatment of title track by Blanche Barton.
- Satanis Theme – Written in 1968 by LaVey for the film, Satanis.





















