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Wolfman Jack is big, a big man, but he is still somehow smaller in person than in reputation. Everybody knows the Wolfman, everybody can conjure his voice, rough-hewn but friendly, filled with the … ...
Wolfman Jack AudioGenius Unlocks New Content and Revenue Opportunities for the Wolfman Jack Archive Audio Genius has significantly streamlined our process, and we are now able to generate ...
This paean to famed radio disc jockey Robert Weston Smith, better known as Wolfman Jack, drops a number of musical references in the song, much in the same spirit as Don McLean's "American Pie ...
In its prayer-like final passages (the song is so structurally daunting that it’s hard to think in terms of verses), Dylan invokes the DJ Wolfman Jack before dropping a long list of songs and ...
Mostly, though, he makes song requests — asking the great DJ Wolfman Jack, or whoever’s listening, to play him something by the Eagles, Billy Joel, Fleetwood Mac, Queen, Nina Simone ...
But these days Wolfman is grayer and heavier (at 298 pounds) than the Popsicle-popping DJ who played Richard Dreyfuss’ dedication to Suzanne Somers in the classic 1973 movie.
Kevin Dettmar reviews “Murder Most Foul,“ a newly released song by Bob Dylan, which touches on the assassination of President John F. Kennedy and dozens of entries in pop-music canon.
There are more than 70 songs mentioned or referenced in Bob Dylan's new 17-minute single, "Murder Most Foul." Listen to them all.
The band’s 1974 hit “Clap for the Wolfman” was written as an homage to famed late-night disc jockey Wolfman Jack whose husky on-air voice can be heard throughout the original recording.
But his record request is granted, and as he leaves the studio Dreyfuss looks back to see the real Wolfman Jack howling into the mike, and dedicating the song to “my old buddy Curt!” ...
The Wayback Machine was set to 1950-something last night when Wolfman Jack threw his Fabulous ’50s party at Symphony Hall in Allentown.“We’re gonna do a lotta howlin’ tonight, ladies and ...
Weird Al will change the world!” A skeptical Wolfman Jack mocks Weird Al’s alleged talents and challenges him to create a parody song right then and there, on the spot. What! Outrageous!