Ad
related to: stray cat strut video
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
"Stray Cat Strut" is the third single by American rockabilly band Stray Cats, released April 17, 1981 by Arista Records in the UK, where it peaked at No. 11 on the Singles Chart. [2] It was taken from the band's 1981 debut album, Stray Cats. That same year, as an import, it peaked at No. 78 on the US Disco Top 80 chart. [3]
Stray Cats are an American rockabilly band formed in 1979 by guitarist and vocalist ... and "Stray Cat Strut", ... the video for the album's first single, "Cat Fight ...
"Rock This Town" is the second single by American rockabilly band Stray Cats, released January 30, 1981 by Arista Records in the U.K., where it peaked at No. 9 on the Singles Chart. [3] It was taken from the band's 1981 debut album, Stray Cats. Its first US release, by EMI America, was on the June 1982 album Built for Speed.
Several clips from Bad Luck Blackie were used by the rockabilly band The Stray Cats in the music video for their 1983 hit "Stray Cat Strut". [16] Marv Wolfman based the Marvel Comics character Felicia Hardy / Black Cat on Bad Luck Blackie. The character debuted in The Amazing Spider-Man #194 in July 1979. [17]
Video albums: 10: This is the discography of American rockabilly band Stray Cats. Albums. Studio albums ... "Stray Cat Strut" [C] 3 41 57 24 3 20 8 7 9 11
The friends did a four-hour set in Barrera’s South Pasadena driveway on Halloween, and “Weird Al” Yankovic popped by one Sunday for tracks like “Stray Cat Strut.” He also recently joined ...
Stray Cats is the first studio album by American rockabilly band Stray Cats, first released in the United Kingdom by Arista Records in February 1981. It was produced by the band and Dave Edmunds . The album was successful in Britain, peaking at No. 6 on the UK Albums Chart , and produced the UK Singles Chart top 40 hits " Runaway Boys " (No. 9 ...
Brian Robert Setzer (born April 10, 1959) is an American guitarist, singer, and songwriter. He found widespread success in the early 1980s with the 1950s-style rockabilly group Stray Cats, and returned to the music scene in the early 1990s with his swing revival band, the Brian Setzer Orchestra.