The Residents/Tear Jerker: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* ''Demons Dance Alone'' was chock full of this. Standouts include the "Loss" section and "Make Me Moo."
* ''Demons Dance Alone'' was chock full of this. Standouts include the "Loss" section and "Make Me Moo."
* ''Animal Lover.'' From "What Have My Chickens Done Now?" in which an army of [[Kids Are Cruel|bratty children]] pick on an old lady, getting harsher and harsher in their ways, until {{spoiler|they successfully frame her for abusing them, which gets her hanged,}} to pieces like "Dead Men," My Window," and "Inner Space," in which a woman recounts her visits to a bitter, detached father spending his last days in a hospital, this is considered one of the band's more depressing pieces, from a time when they were at their most pessimistic.
* ''Animal Lover.'' From "What Have My Chickens Done Now?" in which an army of [[Kids Are Cruel|bratty children]] pick on an old lady, getting harsher and harsher in their ways, until {{spoiler|they successfully frame her for abusing them, which gets her hanged,}} to pieces like "Dead Men," My Window," and "Inner Space," in which a woman recounts her visits to a bitter, detached father spending his last days in a hospital, this is considered one of the band's more depressing pieces, from a time when they were at their most pessimistic.
* The group's rendition of "[[Bury Me Not On the Lone Prairie]]," from the Cube-E show.
* The group's rendition of "[[Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie]]," from the Cube-E show.


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Revision as of 04:47, 9 April 2014


  • Demons Dance Alone was chock full of this. Standouts include the "Loss" section and "Make Me Moo."
  • Animal Lover. From "What Have My Chickens Done Now?" in which an army of bratty children pick on an old lady, getting harsher and harsher in their ways, until they successfully frame her for abusing them, which gets her hanged, to pieces like "Dead Men," My Window," and "Inner Space," in which a woman recounts her visits to a bitter, detached father spending his last days in a hospital, this is considered one of the band's more depressing pieces, from a time when they were at their most pessimistic.
  • The group's rendition of "Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie," from the Cube-E show.