First Album

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (87 ratings)

We’re sorry. This album is unavailable for download in your country (United States) at this time.

First Album album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 21   Total Length: 63:14

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Bruce Pollock

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
Finally, an answer to the immortal question: "Do you like boobs a lot?"
2000 | Label: Fantasy

In this era when the use of swearing in songs has gone way beyond any artistic, emotional or even rational meaning, it's hard to imagine the impact of the openly and poetically profane Fugs. Formed by two writers as a hippie wet dream of a concept in the backroom of a bookstore, the Fugs were at first labeled experimental theater as they labored in the Lower East Side, down the street from the equally dramatic Mothers of Invention. As this 23-track collection proves, Tuli Kupferberg and Ed Sanders eventually wrote some of the most important dirty folk-rock songs of the era, including "Supergirl," "Boobs a Lot" and "Slum Goddess." Between each of these scatological ditties, you'll find an equally compelling example of socially redeeming material, like "I Saw the Best Minds of My Generation Rot." The concluding "Rhapsody of Tuli" will make you realize what an under-appreciated singer-songwriter Kupferberg really was. Well, songwriter anyway.

Write a Review 5 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

this is a classic

lamotskidaleeboomboon

The Fugs were a group that broke a number of barriers in the 1960 both in content and language. They did not play happy hippy love songs. The music ranged from topics such as the Vietnam war to Victorian poetry. I do not understand why anyone complains about this music if they listen to the samples. And the titles should be a clue. No one will dance to this music but it has value as performance art. If you want less Fugs and more gritty music try the Holy Modal Rounders. The Rounders grew out of this group and are probably more main steam. I use that term loosley. I am glad to be able to hear them again. And I will be reciting along with the Swineburn.

user avatar

Why

carefully

exactly is a fuggin' Fugs album 21 credits to download? I enjoy listening to the Fugs, really, but they're also total crap. Mean song runtime is 2.84 minutes. Where's that sweet album pricing when I need it?

user avatar

My 16 month old grandson can do so much better!

adreane

They call this MUSIC???

user avatar

Fuggin Awful!

EMUSIC-008B806E

I downloaded two tracks and wish I hadn't. I can't imagine anyone wanting to listen to the Fugs very often...

user avatar

who's laughing now

EMUSIC-01DAB35F

don't know what i mean by the title, but anyway...the first Fugs album was the ONLY record i ever returned to the store for a refund...although i did like "Couldn't Get High" by hey, I thought the MC5 were just a bunch of noise until i really listened...so maybe i'll try this again....ha ha ha

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

'60s Folk-Rock

By Bruce Pollock, eMusic Contributor

If you came of musical age anywhere near Greenwich Village in the early '60s, folk music was your punk rock: passionate, rebellious, unkempt, like Allen Ginsberg or his fiery young acolyte, Bob Dylan. Within its long literature were songs of death, depravity and defiance. In the thundering era of the Twist, these songs were impossible to dance to. Growing up in the shadow of the bomb, under the cultural sway of Ed Sullivan and Dick… more »

0

Avant-Rock

By Christopher R. Weingarten, eMusic Contributor

In the mid '60s, rock had started its move from counter-cultural menace to culture itself. Words like "poetry" and "art" turned drug-addled noise-making into an intellectual pursuit, the Beatles rubbed shoulders with the Queen at her birthday bash and the fat pockets of major labels (still upset that the indies bested them during rock's genesis) made sure radio would forever bury records without a glossy studio sheen. Through opposition (or Darwinian necessity), an influential breed of… more »

0

Classic Rock

By Keith Harris, eMusic Contributor

What is "classic rock" anyway? Blues or disco or hip-hop or polka -- these each sound like something in particular. But the borders of classic rock are marked off not by common formal aspects or even fan consensus, but by arbitrary playlists designed almost 20 years ago and updated cautiously since. Very cautiously -- maybe more than any genre, classic rock's appeal is rooted in familiarity, each track insisting that it's the best music that… more »

They Say All Music Guide

A loping, ridiculous, and scabrous release, the Fugs’ debut mashed everything from folk and beat poetry to rock and rhythm & blues — all with a casual disregard for sounding note perfect, though not without definite goals in mind. Actually compiled from two separate sessions originally done for Folkways Records, and with slightly different lineups as a result, it’s a short but utterly worthy release that pushed any number of 1964-era buttons at once (and could still tick off plenty of people). Sanders produced the sessions in collaboration with the legendary Harry Smith, who was able to sneak the collective onto Folkways’ accounts by describing them as a “jug band,” and it’s not a far-off description. A number of songs sound like calm-enough folk-boom fare, at least on casual listening, though often with odd extra touches like weirdly muffled drums or out of nowhere whistles and chimes. Others, meanwhile, are just out there — thus, the details of the perfect “Supergirl.” Then there’s “Boobs a Lot,” the post-toke/acid lament “I Couldn’t Get High,” and the pie-in-the-face to acceptable standards of the time, “Slum Goddess.” Throughout it all, the Fugs sound like they’re having a perfectly fun time; the feeling is loose, ragged, but right, and while things may be sloppy around the edges, often that’s totally intentional. Certainly little else could explain the random jamming and rhythmic chanting/shouting on “Swinburne Stomp.” Good as the original album is, the CD version is what any serious fan needs to find, thanks to the inclusion of 11 bonus tracks. Some come from the original sessions, including the signature tune “We’re the Fugs” and “The Ten Commandments,” while others appear from various live jams. Then there’s the self-explanatory “In the Middle of Their First Recording Session the Fugs Sign the Worst Contract Since Leadbelly’s.” – Ned Raggett

more »