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Cream Corn From the Socket of Davis
Barnes and Noble
Cream Corn From the Socket of Davis
Current price: $19.99
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Barnes and Noble
Cream Corn From the Socket of Davis
Current price: $19.99
Size: OS
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The title makes about as much sense as anything in
the Surfers
' universe, so hey, why complain? This four-song slice of surferdom has one of the group's most well-known numbers,
"Moving to Florida."
It's actually one of the more atypical songs from the band, consisting of little more than a brisk
blues
/
rockabilly
run with heavy echo alternating with
a cappella
weirdness from
Gibby Haynes
muttering about things like "toilet training with
Chairman Mao."
Occasional screaming outbursts (vocally and musically) keep the variety up.
"Comb"
is a slow cruncher with the patented
Haynes
vocal distortion and weirdness in full effect;
Paul Leary
really goes to town with treatments on his guitar, foreshadowing the screwier work to come, while the whole thing ends with fart and piss sounds (of course).
"To Parter"
has
talking about selling Quaaludes to monkeys and the like over an at-times pretty
Morricone
-gone-psych arrangement, while
"Toronados"
ends things with a goofy romp and rant. ~ Ned Raggett
the Surfers
' universe, so hey, why complain? This four-song slice of surferdom has one of the group's most well-known numbers,
"Moving to Florida."
It's actually one of the more atypical songs from the band, consisting of little more than a brisk
blues
/
rockabilly
run with heavy echo alternating with
a cappella
weirdness from
Gibby Haynes
muttering about things like "toilet training with
Chairman Mao."
Occasional screaming outbursts (vocally and musically) keep the variety up.
"Comb"
is a slow cruncher with the patented
Haynes
vocal distortion and weirdness in full effect;
Paul Leary
really goes to town with treatments on his guitar, foreshadowing the screwier work to come, while the whole thing ends with fart and piss sounds (of course).
"To Parter"
has
talking about selling Quaaludes to monkeys and the like over an at-times pretty
Morricone
-gone-psych arrangement, while
"Toronados"
ends things with a goofy romp and rant. ~ Ned Raggett