As what would seem like music made purely for the stoner crowd -- particularly, for the folks partial to psychedelic 'shrooms -- Les Claypool's Of Fungi and Foe is a demented, cartoonish ode to, you guessed it, mushrooms. But it's not what you might think. Claypool didn't make this record as a cheap ploy to win over Phish's massive hippie fan base after learning of their endless devotion to drug-friendly music while touring with Trey Anastasio in Oysterhead. Even though Phishheads (and Weenheads) will probably find the goofy, cartoonish rollick herein worth visiting, Claypool had other motives behind the drug-friendly theme. The majority of the songs were originally written to be used as a soundtrack for Mushroom Men: The Spore Wars, a video game about mushrooms brought to life after a radioactive meteor, and Pig Hunt, a horror movie about a giant rabid black boar that guards a marijuana field. As well as bouncy bong songs with lyrics like "Now Errol's a smart boy who delivered big weed/Says that he could get you all that you may ever need," there are also some departures. "Red State Girl" drifts off topic as a Democratic satire about a girl who wants to grow up to be like Sarah Palin, and "What Would Sir George Martin Do" ponders how the Beatles producer would go about catching a cab. It's typical Les Claypool tomfoolery, all based around his past couple years making minimalistic jams -- beating bongos, bowing the occasional cello, playing a xylophone, and of course bassing it up through all sorts of weird-sounding envelope filters. Even though he's not billed with the Frog Brigade, it's not entirely a solo affair. Six other musicians make appearances, including Eugene Hütz, frontman of the Gypsy punks Gogol Bordello, who stops in for a jam on "Bite Out of Life." ~ Jason Lymangrover, All Music Guide
their is some slight negative drug message here: be careful of poisonous mushrooms (Amanitas), and don't do so many that you can only enjoy things like music while you are high. s**tty songs are better high, but they are still s**tty songs. that isn't to say weed and shrooms are bad things. just exercise caution and moderation.
Unfortunately, that selfish and totally self-absorbed thought process doesn't see that what you do to your "own body" affects those who may care about you, and where you get your drugs, how and why they're grown or made, where they come from and those people involved are all part of a chain that affects a LOT of people besides just the almighty "me, myself and I". I don't need drugs to listen to Les CLaypool, or anyone else. Claypool is an excellent bass player, and many folks think I play a lot