T1 – Monster Mash – Your gonna see them!
First they will MASH official term for the distillation process Diagram above and here on this website and here in the open air below the video.
Once Trumpet Number One has been executed by burning the mash with the methane gas released from the bottom of the ocean and you have no food or very little when you have to go to work for a day just to buy two pounds or 907 grams of wheat flour, you will see many monsters / zombies on the street!
Here is Bobby Pickett with his Monster Mash song
Yes in a “flash you’ll catch on” – that the warning God gave was the Truth!
Diagram of the processes involved in burning the mash in the open when Trumpet Number one is executed below.
About Bobby Pickett – link to Wikipedia here
Robert George Pickett (February 11, 1938 – April 25, 2007), better known as Bobby “Boris” Pickett, was an American singer-songwriter and comedian. He is best known for co-writing and performing the 1962 smash hit novelty song “Monster Mash”.[1]
Born in Somerville, Massachusetts, Pickett watched many horror films as a result of his father’s position as a local movie theater manager. He started improvising impressions of Hollywood film stars at a young age. At a turning point in his career, Pickett was a vocalist for a local swing band called Darren Bailes and the Wolf Eaters. He would later serve in the United States Army.
He co-wrote his signature song, “Monster Mash”, with Leonard Capizzi in May 1962 as a spoof of popular contemporary dance crazes. Pickett’s performances include impersonations of Boris Karloff (The Mummy (1932)) and Bela Lugosi (Dracula (1931)), and although many major labels declined to distribute the song, Gary S. Paxton agreed to release it in the United States. “Monster Mash” was met with instant success and peaked at No. 1 on the US Billboard Hot 100 for two weeks in October 1962, including Halloween. The song was certified gold by the RIAA on August 28, 1973.[2] The song has since re-charted five more times—in 1970, 1973 (when it reached the Top Ten), 2021, 2022, and 2023.[3]
Though Pickett never achieved the same success as he did with “Monster Mash” on charts, he continued to lend his voice to further parodies and other songs throughout the rest of his life. Pickett also made appearances on television, film, and radio as a guest star, narrator, actor, and disc jockey. He released Monster Mash: Half Dead in Hollywood, an autobiography, in 2005. Pickett died of leukemia on April 25, 2007, at age 69.