🧟♂️ About the Song
Monster Mash was born from pure silliness — and became a Halloween institution. In 1962, Bobby Pickett (an actor and singer who did a killer Boris Karloff impression) was performing with his band when he started mocking horror-movie voices mid-song. The crowd loved it so much he decided to write a whole track around it — and boom, the graveyard smash was born.
It’s a perfect parody of early ’60s dance crazes like The Twist and The Mashed Potato, only this time the dancers are ghouls, vampires, and Frankenstein’s mates. With a spooky organ, creepy sound effects, and Pickett’s pitch-perfect monster narration, it rocketed to #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 just in time for Halloween 1962.
It’s been resurrected every October since, and let’s be honest — the world would feel wrong without it.
🎸 Ukulele Playing Tips
- Chords:C – Am – F – G7 (the holy four-chord Halloween progression).
- Verses: C – Am – F – G7,
- Chorus: F – G7 – C – Am – F – G7 – C.
- Strumming pattern: Bouncy and playful: Down–Down–Up–Up–Down-Up, with a little swing in the wrist.
- Tempo: Around 124 bpm — upbeat, not frantic.
- Tone: Bright and clear — imagine Frankenstein trying to boogie without breaking anything.
- Feel: It’s a novelty tune — go big! Over-enunciate the lyrics, use funny voices, and don’t take yourself seriously.
- Performance tip: On the line “It was a graveyard smash,” pause and shout it like you’re announcing the winner of Strictly Come Dancing: Zombie Edition.
- Optional flourish: Add muted “chuck” strums between lines to mimic that snare shuffle groove.
🧠 Trivia You Can Drop Casually
- Bobby Pickett really wasn’t Boris Karloff — but his impression was so good that people thought the actor had sung it himself.
- The song was banned by the BBC for being “too morbid.” It still hit #1 in the UK years later — undead hits take time.
- Pickett re-recorded it several times, including Monster Rap in 1985. (Yes, it’s exactly as bad as it sounds.)
- In 2023, it charted again — more than 60 years after release. Zombies never die, apparently.
🌈 Final Word
Play Monster Mash like you’re leading a haunted hoedown — camp, loud, and full of mischief.
Lean into the theatricality, growl the verses, and belt the chorus with undead pride.
If your audience isn’t grinning by the end, resurrect them properly next time.






