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E=Mo2 / Live at the Hasty Pudding Theatre

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Download links and information about E=Mo2 / Live at the Hasty Pudding Theatre by Emo Philips. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Humor genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 01:18:44 minutes.

Artist: Emo Philips
Release date: 2003
Genre: Humor
Tracks: 18
Duration: 01:18:44
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. A Fine How-Do-Ya-Do 4:35
2. Why Our Family Is Nice 5:32
3. My Childhood, Yes 6:46
4. Downtown Downer's Grove 3:02
5. I'm a Great Lover, I Bet 6:28
6. How to Escape Death 4:20
7. Equustentialisma 3:18
8. A "Dreamy" Dilemma 5:50
9. Finding the Microphone 0:34
10. Duck - Billed Platitudes 0:55
11. College - The Best 6 Weeks of My Life 5:00
12. Poetry and Scuba Diving 2:33
13. Why I Am Quite Handy with the Ladies 10:02
14. The Perils of Inbreeding 1:43
15. Kafka-Doodle Doo 8:02
16. For a Fist Full of Cole Slaw 2:47
17. Animal Square Dance 4:59
18. How Girls Can Score with Me 2:18

Details

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"I was in the park today, minding my own business — staring at people, trying to make their brains explode." "You know who I hate more than anyone else? Indian givers. No, I take that back." "How many people here have telekinetic powers? Raise my hand." These are just a few examples of Emo Philips' looping, wide-eyed act, where his kooky idiosyncrasies mask the pointed cynicism and prescient observations that are the foundations of his sense of his humor. This Sony release compiles two of Philips' previous albums, E=MO2 and Live at the Hasty Pudding Theatre. A typical Philips bit evolves in the first person and finds the comic recollecting his daily experiences in a shifting mixture of scathing one-liners ("I still remember the last words of my grandfather: 'A truck!'") and meandering story lines. A portion of "Why Our Family Is Nice" unfolds as a seemingly innocuous story about finding change to make a copy. His casual delivery and numerous, curious impersonations mask the lack of an apparent punch line, so that, when it finally drops, the bit is even funnier. Philips' occasional forays into comedy songs (the hilarious "Downtown Downer's Grove," for example) are perfectly paced to break up the purposeful monotony of his delivery. Recommended for fans of Andy Kaufman or Steven Wright.