In 2004, 7 Shot Screamers released their second album Keep The Flame Alive, produced by Levi Dexter of The Rockats and mixed by Paul Roman of The Quakes.
"Moss became a guru of this change – an anti-Times sort of figure in the middle of the Times. A magazine person at a newspaper, an openly gay person in a repressed atmosphere, a mild man among bullies and screamers," described media writer, Michael Wolff, in a 1999 profile of Moss in New York magazine.
Many other composers were well known for writing screamers, among them Fred Jewell and Henry Fillmore.
Recently he scored the 90-minute documentary about the Armenian Genocide called Screamers.
He reached the apex of his popularity as a singer in the 1960s, when he was one of the so-called "urlatori" (literally: "screamers"), a group of early rock singers which also included Adriano Celentano, Little Tony, Tony Dallara, and others.
A Canadian film, based on "Second Variety", titled Screamers, was made in 1995, featuring Peter Weller.
Formed as The Screamers in 1958, they soon after changed their name to The Flairs (not to be confused with the doo-wop group The Flairs based in Los Angeles).
The band re-formed in Los Angeles in 1976, picking up drummer K. K. Barrett and keyboardist David Brown, and a new name, The Screamers.