Daffy Duck's Rhapsody - Dr. Demento, Foster, Warren
Yoda - Dr. Demento, Davies, Ray [Kinks]
The Elements - Dr. Demento, Lehrer, Tom
Deteriorata - Dr. Demento, Guest, Christopher
Charlie Brown - Dr. Demento, Leiber, Jerry
Dungeons and Dragons - Dr. Demento, Harmon, Dan
Eskimo - Dr. Demento, Cullen, Sean
The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins - Dr. Demento, Grean, Charles Rand
Kill the Wabbit - Dr. Demento, McCollum, Mark
Stress - Dr. Demento, Infantino, Jim
On the Shoulders of Freaks - Dr. Demento, Philips, Henry
Bras on 45 [Family Version] - Dr. Demento, Biggun, Ivor
Polka Dot Undies - Dr. Demento, Bowser, George
Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini - Dr. Demento, Pockriss, Lee
The Thing - Dr. Demento, Grean, Charles Rand
(How I Spent My Summer Vacation) Or a Day at the Beach With Pedro ... - Dr. Demento, Chong, Thomas
The Biggest Ball of Twine in Minnesota - Dr. Demento, "Weird Al" Yankovic
My Ding-A-Ling [Single Version] - Dr. Demento, Berry, Chuck
It's a Gas - Dr. Demento, Neuman, Alfred E.
I Want My Baby Back - Dr. Demento, Botkin
Last Will and Temperment - Dr. Demento, Chato, Paul
Track Listings (21) - Disc #2
I'm the Urban Spaceman - Dr. Demento, Innes, Neil [1]
Bulbous Bouffant - Dr. Demento, Deniger, Bernard
Another One Rides the Bus - Dr. Demento, Deacon, John [Queen
Hamster Love - Dr. Demento, Big Daddy
Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport - Dr. Demento, Harris, Rolf
Tennessee Birdwalk - Dr. Demento, Blanchard, Jack
Dead Skunk - Dr. Demento, Wainwright, Loudon
You Were Speeding - Dr. Demento, Chato, Paul
I Hate When That Happens - Dr. Demento, Crystal, Billy
Lumberjack Song - Dr. Demento, Jones, Terry [2]
Carrot Juice Is Murder - Dr. Demento, McCormick, Mike
The Little Blue Man - Dr. Demento, Ebb, Fred
I'd Rather Have a Bottle in Front of Me (Than a Frontal Lobotomy) - Dr. Demento, Hanzlick, Randy
Comin' Back for More - Dr. Demento, Davis, Chip
Smoke Two Joints - Dr. Demento, Kay, Chris
Ice Box Man - Dr. Demento, Carlin, George
Telephone Man - Dr. Demento, Wilson, Meri
Rock & Roll Doctor - Dr. Demento, Carroll, Pat [1]
Everything Reminds Me of My Therapist - Dr. Demento, Tucker, Nancy [1]
Downtown - Dr. Demento, Hatch, Tony
Let's All Get Demented - Dr. Demento, Biggun, Ivor
When your life's work is collecting the most absurd and goofy tunes ever recorded, the phrase "life's work" takes on an entirely less menacing tone. For Dr. Demento, "work" entails rounding up Daffy Duck's finest-ever perf... more »ormance, a Monty Python ditty, a few Weird Al Yankovic tunes, and a number of other nutty classics in an uninhibited tribute to absurdity. While most of the material here is parody or novelty tunes, some of the set's funniest moments are the straight comedy pieces: George Carlin on food abandoned in the fridge, Cheech & Chong at the beach, and the hilariously absurd Vestibules doing "Bulbous Bouffant." While certainly not something designed for repeated listening, you never know when you'll have the unbearable urge to hear "Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini." --S. Duda« less
When your life's work is collecting the most absurd and goofy tunes ever recorded, the phrase "life's work" takes on an entirely less menacing tone. For Dr. Demento, "work" entails rounding up Daffy Duck's finest-ever performance, a Monty Python ditty, a few Weird Al Yankovic tunes, and a number of other nutty classics in an uninhibited tribute to absurdity. While most of the material here is parody or novelty tunes, some of the set's funniest moments are the straight comedy pieces: George Carlin on food abandoned in the fridge, Cheech & Chong at the beach, and the hilariously absurd Vestibules doing "Bulbous Bouffant." While certainly not something designed for repeated listening, you never know when you'll have the unbearable urge to hear "Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini." --S. Duda
"... a tragic admission at many encounter sessions.But what the hell, I'm a member of the Demento Society and yay for lunacy!This collection brings out tunes and sketches that have not been seen since "Greatest Novelty Records of All Time". I still have the cassette with "Rock and Roll Doctor" on it. A good chunk of these tracks I only had from recordings off the airwaves.It must be acknowledged that there will ALWAYS be a Weird Al, Tom Lehrer, Spike Jones, or Stan Freberg on each compilation. The reason is simple, name recognition and pure talent. With any luck, subsequent revisions and releases will have the many out-of-print works of the likes of the Frantics, Shel Silverstein, and the "Them-Poems" of Mason Williams. Anyone who listened to and enjoyed the show, briefly, casually, will surely feel justified in adding this (and the two previous) compilation to his/her collection. The humor is timeless. Thank You Dr D,for providing us with classic novelty recordings, thank you for keeping these things archived so that they can be tranferred to a less destructable medium, thank you bringning us this album!Stay DEEE-MENTED!"
Music To Make My Road Trip Fly!
Jack Angel | Austin, TX | 09/16/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Before taking a well deserved road trip this summer to San Fran. I bought Dr. Demento's 30th!, The Annoying Music Show CD, and Golden Throats. Needless to say, thanks to the good Doctor, Jim Nayder & William Shatner -I've never laughed so hard in my life. The songs fit the changing scenes and people so perfectly, it was frightening. The miles flew by, and I don't think I turned on my radio more than 4 or 5 times -only to get the weather. I kept popping the CD's back in, mainly because I COULDN'T BELEIVE IT. These songs have to be listened to carefully and should be appreciated as what is truly American classical music from the Bizarro World. Thanks Doc!!!!"
Dr.Demento-Still CrazyAfter AllTheseYears
Scott N.Burton | Bridgeport, Ct United States | 10/18/2000
(4 out of 5 stars)
"I've been a huge fan of Dr.Demento since the mid-1970's-Unfortunately,his program isn't heard in the NY metro area at the present time,which is a doggone shame-You will not be disappointed with this particular anthology-My favorite cuts are "The Elements","Deteriarota","Ice Box Man",& that ode to pulchritude,"Bras on 45"-If you're a true Dementite or Dementoid, you must purchase this one."
Oh, the threads that weave the cloth of Dementia...
Sparky P. | composer, all around nice guy, yada yada yada | 05/03/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"It's great to find even more Dr. Demento favorites on one tidy package, especially "It's a Gas," "I Want My Baby Back" (both of which I have not heard in almost 25 years!), and "Hamster Love." OK, so there isn't any Spike Jones or Allan Sherman here; that's all right, there are plenty of anthologies of their material around. OK, so there are one Tom Lehrer and three "Weird Al" Yankovic tracks; that's all right as two of the "Weird Al" tracks fit very nicely into the scheme of things (true, I, too, am tired of seeing Weirld Al on these anthologies). What is great about this set is that almost all of the tunes relate to each other in some bizarre way or another in a series of thematic chains; some are obvious, others subliminal. Starting on the first disc, the first five tracks are almost independent to each other, complete with an overture ("Daffy Duck's Rhapsody"). The first thematic chain begins with "Dungeon and Dragons," leading to a few tracks of matters of fringe characters. The Ozzie Fudd track leads to "Stress," then to "On the Shoulders of Freaks," which leads nicely to a tome of "over the shoulder boulder holders" ("Bras on 45") and other tunes regarding undergarments, culminating to Brian Hyland's ditty leading to beach scenes. The Cheech & Chong bit leads to the subject of vacations, tied in with Weird Al's "Twine" track. After the Chuck Berry fluke tune (his only #1 when his prime tunes came up quite short; chart robbery I say, but that's another story), "It's a Gas" relates to the "Twine" tune in regards to roadtrips and what to put into the vehicle, leading to another car tune which tragically goes awry ("I Want My Baby Back"), segueing to what happens after someone departs ("Last Will and Temperment").The second disc opens with the Bonzo's Beatle Paul-produced "Urban Spaceman" (I am glad to see the Bonzos acknowledged in a Demento anthology; the complete boxset of all of their albums, Cornology, is worth seekingout; we miss Viv Stanshall), which goes to "Bulbous Bouffant," taking place at an urban bus stop. The bus eventually arrives, but it is alas stuffed to the rafters ("Another One Rides the Bus"). Then we get a series of fauna-related tunes, culminating to one critter which meets it demise ("Dead Skunk"), what likely caused it ("You Were Speeding") and the feelings arising from it ("I Hate When That Happens"). The rest of the disc is made up of a combination of odd lifestyles, occupations, dementia(of course), and what to do about it. The last three tunes offer some choices (as it were) on the last subjects; one can, A) seek professional help("Everything Reminds Me of My Therapist", harking to the previous "Rock & Roll Doctor"); B) escape and have some fun (Mrs. Miller's spirited, if that is the correct word, rendition of "Downtown"); or C) just revel in its demented glory as Ivor Biggun so eloquently states (not that there's anything wrong with that!). But you know, despite all that blathering, it is quite a fun set (although I would have love to have seen Les Crane's "Desiterata" segue right into "Deteriorata"). It is a great combination of well-known tidbits of lunacy and lesser-known diamonds in the dementia rough. I just wish the good Doctor's show could get back here in the Bay Area. I hope that in future Demento anthologies such acts like anything by the Android Sisters, "Mama Get Your Hammer (There's a Fly on Baby's Head)" by the Bobby Peterson Quartet and Ogden Edsel's "Kinko the Kid Loving Clown" will get to see the light of CD day. Thank you, Dr. Demento."