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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Songs in the Key of Z: It's the Real Thing, Baby, March 17, 2004
About a million years ago, when our far-from-human ancestors were still huddling together in a damp hole in the ground, picking lice from each other's armpits, music was born. Those peabrained hominids found they enjoyed barking and howling at the moon together, harmonizing as it were, and gradually incorporated a whole range of yelps, shrieks, farts and belches---which they could and did perform for the sheer exhilaration of the act. Yeah, this was the essential music, the primal music, with a weight and currency all its own, long before the spoken word polluted our ears. So, here we are a million years later, and we've forgotten the primal origin of music, it's been bred out of us---now we PAY a relative handful of polished schmucks to serenade us, because we fear that our own music, our own barking & yelping frenzy, is somehow unworthy. And this is what we now call the REAL world. Thank Christ for schizophrenia... Indeed, only a complete retreat from "reality" can deliver us to the roots of REAL music---and this is where I finally get around to endorsing "Songs in the Key of Z"... This is the real thing, baby, unencumbered by social dictates, false morality, political agendas... My most excellent advice: Don't try to rationalize the contents of this album WHATSOEVER. Don't just TRY to sing along, but really get INTO it, and howl your ass off if it feels good. Rock over London, Rock on Chicago, Northwest Airlines: Some People Just Know How To Fly.
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Enjoy it for what it is...., June 18, 2003
I read a review on here that stated people should avoid this CD because 'it's not funny'. I feel that the reviewer may be missing what I think is the point. I don't think this was put out as a worst song CD, but as a glimpse into what has been labeled 'outsider' music. The songs on this CD are certainly bizarre, and even incedentally funny, but the people on this CD made thier music not as a joke, but because they felt the need to do so, an urge from within. Granted, some urges should be supressed, but I welcome the diversity of the music on this CD. Listening, you will understand why none of these people will probably ever see a contract with a major record label. To me, these songs and artists represent the fringe of the music world. And I did laugh at a number of the tracks, but I also kept it within the context of this is not a novelty record, but a glimpse into a world many of us don't get a chance to see. If you want novelty, go get a Dr. Demento CD. but if you want something different, bizzare, odd, and an all around unique music experience, check out this CD.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Musical Eden?!, November 8, 2001
This review is from: SONGS IN THE KEY OF Z (Audio CD)
This album is billed as a sort of return to Eden-- the Purity of Music before being tainted by the dirty hands of our commercial society. Yet, if this is what purity sounds like, well, I don't know... Why should you buy this album? It isn't the sort of music that you will find stuck on infinite repeat in your CD player. Nor will you need to hold yourself back from belting out "Rock n' Roll McDonald's" while browsing your local library. Rather, this album will emerge from your collection to meet an intense and incurable craving for the fabulously unusual. Certainly you need a sense of humor, and being slightly bizarre yourself helps too. While you would be hard pressed to find someone who loved every song on this album, there is something for everyone (or at least everyone with a taste for this sort of thing). Personal favorites of mine include B.J. Snowden's "In Canada," the lyrics of which scan with such misfortune as to create a hitherto unknown experience of the English language. Despite countless listening, "Virgin Child of the Universe" continues to delight due to the incongruity of the naively generic setting of the slightly disturbing lyrics. There are sounds captured here that you certainly will not find elsewhere-- both humorous and inexplicably attractive. And I must admit, there is something appealing about the seeming unselfconsciousness about the whole thing.
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