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What? And Give Up Showbiz?
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What? And Give Up Showbiz?
Current price: $22.99
Barnes and Noble
What? And Give Up Showbiz?
Current price: $22.99
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Topical, humorous, multifariously virtuosic, and never afraid of a dirty joke,
the Asylum Street Spankers
have always been more at home on-stage than in the studio. This two-disc set documents the highlights from a two-week stint at
the Barrow Street Theatre
in New York, and offers a fairly predictable program of fan favorites (
"Beer,"
"Winning the War on Drugs,"
"Stick Magnetic Ribbons on Your SUV"
) augmented by extensive between-song patter. Not all of the patter is quite as funny as it really ought to be, but the performances are tight and energetic and anyone who misses
the Squirrel Nut Zippers
or enjoys the political Great Folk Scare stylings of
the Foremen
will get a big kick out of this band. There's also some throat singing, a musical saw, a blistering version of
"Got My Mojo Workin'"
(sung by the brilliant
Christina Marrs
), more than one puerile novelty number (most notably the sniggering
"My Country's Calling Me"
), and a handful of brilliant, fully realized originals as well: note in particular
Marrs
' spectacular period piece
"Monkey Rag."
The album's most potentially embarrassing moment -- a putative country-rap fusion titled
"Hick Hop"
-- somehow manages to avoid being deeply embarrassing and succeeds at being merely boring. Overall, this is a good two-disc set that would have been an excellent one-disc set -- but since it's priced like a single disc, there's no reason to complain. ~ Rick Anderson
the Asylum Street Spankers
have always been more at home on-stage than in the studio. This two-disc set documents the highlights from a two-week stint at
the Barrow Street Theatre
in New York, and offers a fairly predictable program of fan favorites (
"Beer,"
"Winning the War on Drugs,"
"Stick Magnetic Ribbons on Your SUV"
) augmented by extensive between-song patter. Not all of the patter is quite as funny as it really ought to be, but the performances are tight and energetic and anyone who misses
the Squirrel Nut Zippers
or enjoys the political Great Folk Scare stylings of
the Foremen
will get a big kick out of this band. There's also some throat singing, a musical saw, a blistering version of
"Got My Mojo Workin'"
(sung by the brilliant
Christina Marrs
), more than one puerile novelty number (most notably the sniggering
"My Country's Calling Me"
), and a handful of brilliant, fully realized originals as well: note in particular
Marrs
' spectacular period piece
"Monkey Rag."
The album's most potentially embarrassing moment -- a putative country-rap fusion titled
"Hick Hop"
-- somehow manages to avoid being deeply embarrassing and succeeds at being merely boring. Overall, this is a good two-disc set that would have been an excellent one-disc set -- but since it's priced like a single disc, there's no reason to complain. ~ Rick Anderson