My last Halloween post…hope you enjoy the day and especially the night!
This song peaked at #45 in the Billboard 100 in 1975. The album of the same name peaked at #5 in the Billboard Album Charts in 1975. Alice Cooper (Vincent Furnier) parted with The Alice Cooper Band to make this album solo.
When Alice Cooper released Welcome To My Nightmare in February 1975, he was already one of the most famous rock celebrities on the planet. Between 1971 and 1974, the Alice Cooper Band, which consisted of Cooper himself (born Vincent Furnier), guitarists Glen Buxton and Michael Bruce, bassist Dennis Dunaway and drummer Neal Smith, had notched up an impressive run hit albums.
Alice Cooper: “People would come and see us play and just assume that as I was the lead singer then I must be Alice Cooper,” he explains today. “But originally the band was simply called the Alice Cooper Band. But because everyone thought I was Alice I decided it would be easier and better for the band to simply start calling myself Alice. Of course, later, when I would go solo for Welcome To My Nightmare, I’d really become Alice Cooper.”
From Songfacts
This was the centerpiece to Cooper’s 1975 tour, which opened with this song and set the stage for the macabre scenes that followed. Cooper approached the song as a production number, and that’s how he performed it. For the tour, the musicians were hidden in the back of the stage while Alice performed with various dancers and props. He would emerge in a haze of smoke, singing this song on a bed; the rest of the show was based on the idea that we were seeing his nightmares brought to life.
Any meaning in the song is up to the listener, as Alice explained, “I project images to the audience and they make up their own story to fit it. I have no message at all. I never did.”
In 1975, Cooper turned the stage show built around this song into a concert movie called Alice Cooper: Welcome to My Nightmare, and a TV movie called The Nightmare. The famous horror movie actor Vincent Price played “The Spirit of the Nightmare,” narrating the show. The movie was a precursor to long-form music videos, as it was a theatrical production set to music. The most famous long-form video arrived in 1984 with Michael Jackson’s “Thriller,” also featuring narration from Vincent Price.
Welcome To My Nightmare
Welcome to my nightmare
I think you’re gonna like it
I think you’re gonna feel like you belong
A nocturnal vacation
Unnecessary sedation
You want to feel at home ’cause you belong
Welcome to my nightmare
Welcome to my breakdown
I hope I didn’t scare you
That’s just the way we are when we come down
We sweat and laugh and scream here
‘Cause life is just a dream here
You know inside you feel right at home here
Welcome to my breakdown
Whoa
You’re welcome to my nightmare
Yeah
Welcome to my nightmare
I think you’re gonna like it
I think you’re gonna feel that you belong
We sweat laugh and scream here
‘Cause life is just a dream here
You know inside you feel right at home here
Welcome to my nightmare
Welcome to my breakdown
Yeah

I love this record!
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His shows certainly were theatrical! quite ground-breaking for the day, I would imagine.
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Alice Cooper was very theatrical.
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Yes he was and is now. I saw him open up for the Stones in 2006… the Stones looked old… he looked like he walked out of 1972 because of his makeup… he still did some of the theatrical things. He sounded great.
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Reblogged this on blackwings666.
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Thanks man
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Alice Cooper is the one who started it all (rock theatrics of a dark nature.) He reigned at this time. Next came Black Sabbath.
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Yea he started it rolling. He seems to be a nice guy in person.
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I remember watching a documentary of the history of rock’n roll or something or other. When they showed the theatrical element of Alice’s shows I was quietly impressed. But when he started speaking in an interview I was blown away by how articulate he was.
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He seems to be a very nice guy also. I told the story today…I saw him open for the Stones in 2006 and the Stones looked old but Alice looked like he walked out of the seventies with that makeup.
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Yes, he’s aged really well hasn’t he? The Stones have always looked a bit on the decrepit side.
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What a cool pioneer. I have always enjoyed him. Marilyn Manson was a tacky copy.
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A very tacky copy…plus Alice’s music is better…to me anyway
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I agree.
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