The excavation of an entire album's worth of unreleased material by
the Driving Stupid must have excited some die-hard garage-heads, though the result proved to be somewhat less thrilling than might have been imagined. The exact sources of each specific track are undocumented, but they're taken from their 1966 demos in New Mexico and the unreleased album they did in Hollywood the same year. Both sides of the
"Horror Asparagus Stories"/
"The Reality of (Air) Fried Borsk" single are included as well, naturally. But the reality of
the Driving Stupid is that this particular brand of
horror/
science fiction/
comedy rock isn't too funny or clever. Imagine a bunch of teenagers who barely know their way around their instruments, fueled by a steady diet of
surf rock,
Mad magazine, and monster and outer-space films, half-improvising songs in their suburban basement. That's what this sounds like, and though some might interpret that as a high recommendation, it's not.
Frank Zappa and
the Mothers of Invention these guys weren't, though those who get enormous kicks out of kitsch might enjoy songs about postmen putting spiders in mailboxes and the like, backed by the most rudimentary of riffs and over-excited sung-spoken vocals. They did actually try to get "serious" on a couple of occasions with the romantic
ballad "How Do You Tell a Stranger?" and the deliberately
Lovin' Spoonful-like
"Happytime Springface and Flowers," and not memorably so. For those enamored of the
"Horror Asparagus Stories"/
"The Reality of (Air) Fried Borsk" single (which admittedly did include their best songs), rawer versions of each of those songs are here, along with an interview with lead guitarist
Roger Kelley that does much to reveal the mysterious story of the group. ~ Richie Unterberger