The Psychopathology Of Everyday Life

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The Psychopathology Of Everyday Life album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 18   Total Length: 43:19

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mixed quality

Acsumama

I love King Missile, but this is definitely one of their weaker efforts. The "lots of swearing is funny" shtick gets old really fast -- yet that's the basis of half of the songs on this album. On the other hand, there are some gems here. "The Miracle of Childbirth" is a hilarious way of facing up to a painful fact of life. "Jim" and "Domestic Life" showcase KM's increasingly self-referential turn.

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Bad words

jdmack

This album has bad words. A lot of bad words. A whole lot of bad words! Damn, I don't think any artist has crammed so many bad words into a single album! I listen to this album, and I think "I bet 15 year olds will find this album to be hilarious," and I think this while laughing my head off. Then I think, "This is wearing thin. There is no way I'm going to listen to this a second time" and I continue to laugh my head off and press the back skip button to hear one of the Pain Series Poems again. All I know for sure is - if you listen to this album even once, you will go to Hell.

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They Say All Music Guide

With The Psychopathology of Everyday Life, the merry pranksters of King Missile continue with the formula established over ten years before on the classic Mystical Shit. It’s simple, really. Vocalist John S. Hall recites his acerbic, often perverse narratives in a nasal monotone that suggests the know-it-all sitting behind you on the bus. While King Missile’s actual music has assumed numerous forms over the years, Psychopathology finds Hall, Sasha Forte, and Bradford Reed sticking mainly to piano, samples, fiddle, and percussion, though the faux metal of “Chickens” harkens to their heavier past. Highlights include “JLH,” in which Hall commends Jennifer Love Hewitt for not speaking out against war, politics, or 9/11. “Eating People” sets up the classic King Missile paradox, in which the listener is at once repulsed with Hall’s logic, while being impressed that he’s so convincing. And a running gag called “Pain Series” extends over five tracks, with Hall introducing the snippets as “poems,” when they are, in fact, hilarious essays on how much stupid-fun swearing is. Not sure whether you’ll get the joke? King Missile supplies the punch line on “Psychopathology”‘s front cover: “WARNING! Contains lots of curses: Do Not Buy!” – Johnny Loftus

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