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Life in the Foodchain
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Life in the Foodchain
Current price: $17.99
Barnes and Noble
Life in the Foodchain
Current price: $17.99
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One of the best things about the late-'70s
explosion is that it changed the rules for
musicians across the board, and while
wasn't a for-real
er (or even really
), there's no way he could have made an album as willfully strange and bitterly witty as
without
or
first raising the stakes in the
outrage department. And it's a good thing;
(aka
) was actually a staunch Leftist moralist wearing the cloak of a raving lunatic, and on
, his rampantly cynical trades about the abuse of wealth, the collapse of values, and the emotional abuse that passed for love near the end of the 20th century cut like a chainsaw while also managing to be pretty damn funny.
is nearly as ambitious as its title (and even funnier), while
and
say a lot more about the failings of our culture than most "serious" songwriters were offering in 1979, and side two's meditations on romance (especially
) make
sound like
. And while one might wish that
had had a band as tough and brittle as
backing him, he and producer
got an admirably hard-rocking, stripped-down sound from their band of studio professionals (including
,
, and
) -- and
was way ahead of the hipster curve in giving
a guest shot on a couple cuts. And who wouldn't love an album released by the same people responsible for
's career that featured the line "I wish I was as mellow/As for instance Jackson Browne/But 'Fountain of Sorrow' my ass, motherf--ker/I hope you wind up in the ground!"? A masterpiece. ~ Mark Deming