eMusic Review 0
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.