playlist courtesy of The Dr. Demento Show

The Dr. Demento Show #25-25 - June 21, 2025

Special Topic: part 2 of my special series of retrospectives covering the entire 55-year history of The Dr. Demento Show (pick up the story in 1975)
A Tribute To Dr. Demento - Benny Bell
The Tattooed Lady (live on WNBC, 3-8-1975) (w/ outro) - Benny Bell
#1 jingle (brief in-studio performance) - Dr. Demento
Hello Mudduh, Hello Fadduh! (A Letter From Camp) - Allan Sherman
The Vatican Rag (w/ intro) - Tom Lehrer
Down By The Station - Slim Gaillard & His Trio
Theme For Dr. Demento (unedited) - Bob Felten
Cheerio, Cherry Lips, Cheerio - Norman Wallace
Hooray For Captain Spaulding - Groucho Marx

Gumball Wizard (original version) - Brad Stanfield
I Love Your Toes - SuLu
Belvedere Cruisin' (w/ intro) - Alfred Yankovic
Dr. D Superstar (complete) - Alfred Yankovic
Top Hat, White Feather, And Tails (The Sale Of Manhattan) - Stan Freberg
He Hit Me - Bedlam AC
Stardrek - Peter Ferrara & Bobby Pickett
Spam - Monty Python

Dead Puppies - Ogden Edsl Wahalia Blues Ensemble Mondo Bizzario Band
Making Love In A Subaru (original version) - Damaskas
Fred Blassie/Martin Margulies interview excerpts (1978)
Pencil Neck Geek (w/ epilogue) - Fred Blassie
Fred Blassie interview excerpts (1978)
Geek's Revenge (unedited) - Don Noon
Martin Margulies/Don Noon interview excerpts (1978)

Dr. Demento "kids" logo - Seth, Ethan, & Britt
King Tut Strut - Dr. Frank Minyard & His Four Mummies
King Tut - Steve Martin & The Toot Uncommons
Steve Martin interview excerpts (1977)
Frosty The Dopeman - Marc Zydiak
Titties And Beer (1978 edit) - Frank Zappa
Bounce Your Boobies - Rusty Warren
Rusty Warren interview excerpts (1975)
The Ballad Of Irving ("schlepping" version) - Frank Gallop

My Girlfriend Is A Rock - Nervebreakers
Fish Heads - Barnes & Barnes

"Weird Al" Yankovic interview excerpts (from KMET 11-11-1979)

My Bologna - "Weird Al" Yankovic
CLOSING: Cheerios - Alfred Yankovic & Mike Solton/Cheerio, Cherry Lips, Cheerio - "Uncle Floyd" Vivino
next week: flash back to the tail end of the 1970s (portions of my KMET show from December 16, 1979)
in two weeks: the 1980s