Philosophy of the World

Philosophy of The World
Studio album by The Shaggs
Released 1969
Recorded March 9, 1969
Genre Garage rock, proto-punk, outsider
Length 31:39
Label Third Word Records (1969); Red Rooster Records/Rounder Records (1980-1988); RCA Victor (1999)
Producer Austin Wiggin, Terry Adams, Charlie Dreyer[1] (uncredited)
The Shaggs chronology
Philosophy of the World
(1969)
Shaggs' Own Thing
(1982)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic Link
Lester Bangs(Positive) Link
Mojo(Positive) Link
Pitchfork8.6/10 Link

Philosophy of The World is the first album by the all-female teen rock group The Shaggs, released in 1969.

History

The band was composed of three real-life sisters, Helen, Betty, and Dorothy (or "Dot") Wiggin, from Fremont, New Hampshire, USA. They were managed by their father, Austin Wiggin, Jr., and were sometimes accompanied by another sister, Rachel. They performed almost exclusively at the Fremont town hall and at a local nursing home, beginning in 1968 and ending in 1973.

Although most people in Fremont disregarded the band's sound, their father still believed his girls were going to be big stars, and in 1969 he took most of his savings and paid to record an album of their music. Austin drove the girls down to a studio in Massachusetts, determined to get them on tape "while they were still hot." Striking a deal with a local fly-by-night record company called Third World Records, they recorded their debut album in one day, recording a dozen tunes all written by Dot.

Upon the first original pressing, nine hundred of the original thousand copies of the album vanished out of the warehouse, and shortly thereafter their record company's producer/president also vanished and the label quickly folded.

Despite the setback, music collectors quickly got a hold of the remaining copies and word of mouth started, with those who liked it giving almost universal praise, but with many others complaining of the sloppy almost nonsensical way the arrangements were made as well as the singing, with claims this was done intentionally at the urging of their father (a rumor that persisted for many years, although he denied it).

By the mid-seventies WBCN-FM, a local radio station in Boston, Massachusetts, began playing a few cuts from the record, and their popularity was renewed. It was further renewed when two additional things happened: in 1978 famed independent music band NRBQ listened in, sought out a copy, then had it re-released in 1980 on the Red Rooster Records/Rounder Records label; and almost immediately Dr. Demento, an American radio broadcaster and record collector specializing in novelty songs, comedy, and strange or unusual recordings, began to play it almost exclusively on his radio show nationwide, especially around the holiday Halloween when he would play the album track "It's Halloween," and for many years since it became part of his top "Funny Five" recordings of the week.

Other versions of the album's release

Later a CD version of the album, which also contained their follow-up album Shaggs' Own Thing was released in 1988 by Rounder, and another CD of just the original first album was released by RCA Victor in 1999.

Track listing

  1. "Philosophy of the World" – 2:56
  2. "That Little Sports Car" – 2:06
  3. "Who Are Parents?" – 2:58
  4. "My Pal Foot Foot" – 2:31
  5. "My Companion" – 2:04
  6. "I'm So Happy When You're Near" – 2:12
  7. "Things I Wonder" – 2:12
  8. "Sweet Thing" – 2:57
  9. "It's Halloween" – 2:22
  10. "Why Do I Feel?" – 3:57
  11. "What Should I Do?" – 2:18
  12. "We Have a Savior" – 3:06

Reception

"Philosophy of the World is the sickest, most stunningly awful wonderful record I've heard in ages: the perfect mental purgative for doldrums of any kind," wrote Debra Rae Cohen for Rolling Stone in a review of the 1980 reissue. "Like a lobotomized Trapp Family Singers, the Shaggs warble earnest greeting-card lyrics (...) in happy, hapless quasi-unison along ostensible lines of melody while strumming their tinny guitars like someone worrying a zipper. The drummer pounds gamely to the call of a different muse, as if she had to guess which song they were playing - and missed every time."[2] "Without exaggeration," Chris Connelly wrote in a later Rolling Stone article, "it may stand as the worst album ever recorded."[3] In an article for The New Yorker, the album was described as "hauntingly bad".[4]

Blender Magazine placed it 100th on the list of the "100 Greatest Indie-Rock Albums Ever" in 2007. Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain listed Philosophy of the World as his No. 5 favorite album of all time.[5][6][7] The record has also been cited as highly influential by Frank Zappa, Kimya Dawson of The Moldy Peaches, and Deerhoof.[1]

Personnel

Production

Notes

  1. 1 2 Venus Zine article: "Venus Zine Classic: The Shaggs".
  2. Cohen, Debra Rae (October 30, 1980). "Philosophy of the World". Rolling Stone. Straight Arrow Publishers, Inc. (329): 56.
  3. Connelly, Chris (December 11, 1980). "Is Rock Ready for the Shaggs?". Rolling Stone. Straight Arrow Publishers, Inc. (332): 19.
  4. Meet The Shaggs
  5. "Kurt Cobain Top 50 - 05 - The Shaggs - Philosophy Of The World video". NME. 2008-10-16. Retrieved 2012-03-23.
  6. "Top 50 by Nirvana [MIXTAPE]". Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  7. Cross, Gaar, Gendron, Martens, Yarm (2013). Nirvana: The Complete Illustrated History. p. 21. ISBN 978-0-7603-4521-4.

References

Chusid, Irwin. Songs in the Key of Z. 

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