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The Firesign Theatre - Give Me Immortality Or Give Me Death (1998)

Track listing:
  1. Unconscious Village: Wake Up
  2. Eyeballs In The Sky
  3. Us Plus: Pork
  4. Celebrity S
  5. Sports In Your Shorts
  6. Ralph Spoilsport's Going Out O
  7. News Drought Continues, The
  8. Goddess Air Presents "Hullo, D
  9. Developing Chase Situation, A 1:49
  10. Pull My String
  11. Princess Goddess Escapes The Celebrazzis 1:24
  12. Chump Takes Some Hits
  13. Polar Pro: Texas Trots
  14. Miss Shelob's Feelin' Poorly
  15. Unconscious Village: Last Days Sales
  16. Mr. Coffee Comes Up Zeros
  17. Glacier 0:24
  18. Gridlock At Homeless Stadium
  19. Polar Ice: Party Vertical
  20. Going, Going, Gone A La Blonde 2:16
  21. Sex With My Hat
  22. Trippple Ripppoff
  23. Night Whispers
  24. Bebop And Dwayne Feel No Pain 1:13
  25. Smokin' Joe Says Farewell
  26. Us Plus: Zeroes And Ones
  27. Chump Makes A Resolution 1:12
  28. Doll Dr
  29. Radionow Says Good-Bye And Hel

Notes


Firesign Theatre had been out of commission for nearly a decade when they reunited for an anniversary show in 1994, and it had been even longer since all four members had performed together, as David Ossman had bailed out before the release of Nick Danger: The Three Faces of Al. The reunion had gone well for all concerned, so it was probably not a real surprise that all four of them decided to start recording again, though the fact that it took four years was a bit surprising. Though the group had sent up the media before, both television and radio, Give Me Immortality or Give Me Death takes on a style of commercial radio that was more surreal than even the group had imagined back in the '70s. If the members of the troupe are a bit long in the tooth, they're not really showing it here — they're as sharp as they've ever been. The album details the end of one day in the life of Radio Now, a radio station that changes formats more that it changes its play list, and that day just happens to be the last day of 1999, with the Y2K angst looming over nearly everything. Because of that (and knowing how it all turned out), it's impossible for the album not to feel just a little bit dated, but as usual, the album is well-written enough for it to still be entertaining.