Corey Feldman was down an “angel” for his bizarre “Today” performance when one of his girls backed out at the last minute — prompting him to leave her an enraged voice mail saying she’d “never get another [bleeping] gig in LA.”

Guitarist Krystal Khali, who plays with blues musician Guitar Shorty, was asked by Feldman to perform on the show with his backup angels, but she quit four days before the appearance, saying, “I kind of knew it was gonna be a [bleep] show and an embarrassment,” and that Feldman’s dancing during rehearsals “was distracting . . . I couldn’t look at him.”

Khali, who lives in Las Vegas, says Feldman did not offer to pay her and that she used a roommate’s air miles to pay for a plane to LA to rehearse. Once there, Feldman offered to pay for meals, but he “only eats once a day.” He did, however, pay for her airline ticket to New York.

Khali met Feldman in 2015 and played a show with him. She says the organizer offered her a room, but Feldman insisted she stay with him and his “maingel” DJ Courtney Anne Mitchell, in case they “needed to rehearse.” Khali said, “I got the impression that Corey was wanting to lead it into a sexual direction,” but “he didn’t say anything outright. No one was disrobing.”

When Feldman heard Khali, who goes by the stage name Tragic Star, quit, he blew up.

“No human being on this earth would be selfish enough and egotistical enough and [bleeped] up in the head enough to [bleep] friends over like this at the last minute,” he says in the voice mail. “You know I spent real money, and you know that I am struggling, and you know how hard it’s been to get to this point, and no person would do this . . . unless you are a soulless, careless, inhumane [bleeping] piece of [bleep]. So I really hope for all [bleeping] practical purposes that this is an elaborate [bleeping] joke.”

He concludes, “If I don’t [bleeping] hear from you, your name is [bleeping] mud. Let me tell you, don’t even think about coming back to LA because you’ll never get another [bleeping] gig in that town. Ever. I will [bleeping] make sure everybody knows what a piece of [bleep] you are.”