Some articles are all about me! Some articles barely mention old Creepy Clyde. Please be my guest and click on the links to get to know Creepy Clyde a little bit better. While some of the writers interviewed me, I got to know them as well. Great folks with passion for thier work, such as Jason Webber and Amy Yokin for Real Detroit Weekly, L.M. Smith, Millard Berry and Tracey Balazy for the Dearborn Press & Guide, Heritage Newspapers, Benny E. Jet of the Gazette Newspapers. Below is a press release for a general overview. Thanks for droppin' by.
12-00-2002
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
CREEPY CLYDE--AN ORIGINAL, VARIED PERFORMER
Creepy Clyde sings and plays spooky songs -- originals and popular standards including Monster Mash, Attack of the Killer Tomatoes and more -- at the Transylvania House Restaurant and other clubs and engagements in the Detroit area. You can find songs from his CD and merchandise are at creepyclyde.com. At his website you'll also find samples of numerous voice-overs for commercial radio and TV, including work on episodes of Xena: Warrior Princess. There are also samples of produced Halloween commercials using his scary impressions and character voices. Creepy Clyde also makes regular appearances on Horror Movie Host The Ghoul's Show on WB55 in Cleveland Ohio.
Correspondence can be sent to:
Creepy Clyde
1931 Culver
Dearborn, MI 48124-4183
WHAT THEY'RE SAYING ABOUT CREEPY CLYDE:
"In addition to the authentic Romanian dÈcor and cuisine, the
Transylvania House offers customers a nightly floor show, which is not really Romanian, but entertains nonetheless. Creepy Clyde comes in every night and plays a variety of American songs, spooky music, light rock, country -- its great.
Draped entirely in black, and strumming a guitar featuring a giant spidar web, Clyde is the self-proclaimed Master of Monsterous Melodies and adds a unique vampire-ish quality to the Transylvania House during the dinner hours.--DEARBORN PRESS AND GUIDE
Young Goths love Creepy Clyde
Speaking of creepy things, I met Creepy Clyde. Clyde is a singer of spooky songs and is a most interesting fellow. He sings quietly, kind of eerily and kind of like Frank Sinatra.
Young Goth people with black fingernails love him. Old ladies with their hair sprayed stiff can't get enough of him.--BENNY E. JET, MICHIGAN
COMMUNITY NEWSPAPERS
This 13-song disc of lounge-y schmaltz comes from a guy called Creepy Clyde, a self described master of monsterous melodies. Indeed, he sounds creepy, but not in a Halloween-y sort of way; he ís more on the smarmy side, like a Dave Vanian at the height of his Elvis fixation. And Creepy Clyde sounds like Vanian, too, crooning steady streams of sap like "Man-Eating Plant," "The Carp That Ate Detroit," "The Old Man From Kalamazoo" that would sit quite well should you find yourself drunk in a Dearborn fern bar on Halloween night. Strangely, all of this makes Creepy Clyde good and Spooky Town oddly satisfying.--METRO TIMES
The Transylvania House features nightly performances by an appropriate figure, Creepy Clyde, who does an endearing monster act year round.--OBSERVER AND ECCENTRIC NEWSPAPERS
Way back in May of this year, REAL Detroit's "7 Days in Detroit" section listed the following for every night of the week: Transylvania House, Dearborn-Creepy Clyde sings spooky tunes. My immediate thought: Whaaaat? We were in for what can only be described as a most bizarre dining experience via a wacky lounge singer in black with spidar-webbed guitar-Creepy Clyde. And yep, he sang spooky tunes. But what made them particularly scary was that they were all sung as if they were fabulous lounge ballads. I cried out of the corners of my eyes when I made out the lyrics to the Bauhaus classic "Bela Lugosi's Dead," and nearly peed when our musical host donned a ridiculous stuffed spidar hat to croon the theme song from Spider-Man. --REAL DETROIT WEEKLY