This two-CD set begins with a homemade, twangy hip hop pastiche and ends, 50-odd bootleg concert recordings later, with a rejected jingle for stuffed-crust pizzas. As geeky and crude as you'd expect from the twisted minds of Kimya Dawson and Adam Green, both in content and quality, yet from numbskull covers of The Spin Doctors' "Two Princes" and The Grateful Dead's "Friend Of The Devil" to their own "Rainbows" (with its barely repeatable lyric about shitting in a condom), this is compulsively grotesque.
This two-CD set begins with a homemade, twangy hip hop pastiche and ends, 50-odd bootleg concert recordings later, with a rejected jingle for stuffed-crust pizzas. As geeky and crude as you’d expect from the twisted minds of Kimya Dawson and Adam Green, both in content and quality, yet from numbskull covers of The Spin Doctors’ “Two Princes” and The Grateful Dead’s “Friend Of The Devil” to their own “Rainbows” (with its barely repeatable lyric about shitting in a condom), this is compulsively grotesque.