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Night of the Living Dead (song)

"Night of the Living Dead"
Misfits - Night of the Living Dead cover.jpg
The single's title lettering is copied from theatrical posters for the film Night of the Living Dead, after which the single is named.
Single by the Misfits
from the album Walk Among Us
A-side "Night of the Living Dead"
B-side "Where Eagles Dare"
"Rat Fink"
Released October 31, 1979
Format 7" vinyl
Recorded June 1979
Genre Horror punk
Length 5:43
Label Plan 9 (PL 1011)
Songwriter(s) Glenn Danzig
Producer(s) Danny Zelonky
Misfits singles chronology
"Horror Business"
(1979)
"Night of the Living Dead"
(1979)
"Halloween"
(1981)
"Horror Business"
(1979)
"Night of the Living Dead"
(1979)
"Halloween"
(1981)

"Night of the Living Dead" is the fourth single by the horror punk band the Misfits. It was released on October 31, 1979, on singer Glenn Danzig's label Plan 9 Records. 2,000 copies of the single were pressed on black 7" vinyl. The night of its release the band performed at Irving Plaza in New York City and sold the single at the door.

"Night of the Living Dead" is titled after the 1968 horror film of the same name, and the song's lyrics address the zombie plot of the film: "You think you're a zombie, you think it's a scene/from some monster magazine/Open your eyes too late/This ain't no fantasy boy". "Where Eagles Dare" shares its title with a 1968 World War II spy film. "Rat Fink" is a cover of a song by Allan Sherman from his 1963 album My Son, the Nut, which itself is a parody of "Rag Mop". It was the only cover song that the Misfits recorded during their early era, though it was credited on the single itself, and on later releases, to Danzig.

Different versions of all three tracks appeared on compilation albums years after the original single went out of print. An alternate version of "Where Eagles Dare" was released on Legacy of Brutality in 1985, with overdubbed guitar and bass tracks recorded by Danzig. Different versions of "Night of the Living Dead" and "Where Eagles Dare" appeared on Misfits the following year, while "Rat Fink" appeared on Collection II in 1995. All three songs appeared, in all of their different versions and recordings, in The Misfits box set in 1996.


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