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I agree Dylan. That is the most interesting part, the way they seem to truly follow their own internal beat and map, beats and maps that are very hard to follow as a listener. John Lee Hooker and Leadbelly both had similar singular ways of going forward.
I also agree at first listen I laughed out loud. It seemed inept. It seemed like a put on. I do not think either now. I think that is the way they heard it in their heads or perhaps they heard something else and this is as close as they could come. Either way, it is still very interesting to me.





I am positive the Shaggs had great awareness of traditional music form. By this I mean I'm sure they listened devotedly to the pop music of the day. They wanted to be part of the tradition. Or at least their dad wanted them to be. It just came out a little funny.


Angus Jung wrote:"No 'knowledge' = no restrictions. No constraints, like I said. "
This idea always seems like it should be really liberating and incredible, but in my experience the artists with "no 'knowledge'" who end up doing something that not only doesn't suck complete shit, but actually creates new worlds of possibilty directly attributable to their ignorance of the rules, is like one in a billion.
The Shaggs maybe being one of those ones.

Yeah, it's interesting how "no knowledge" turns into "same old knowledge" pretty quickly


gio wrote:Yeah, it's interesting how "no knowledge" turns into "same old knowledge" pretty quickly
Dylan, I'm certain that if the Shaggs put out more material, it would be complete garbage. There's a gimmick element at work here, and certainly a degree of randomness in their notoriety, and musically there's no way they can 'develop' what they did, which was an utter lack of development. But The Philosophy of the World has taken its place in the cult-pop canon, it's fixed, c'est la musique en societe.


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