Mystical Shit & Fluting On The Hump - Track Listing

Track Listing

All lyrics by John S. Hall (except "Love You More," a Buzzcocks cover).

Mystical Shit

  1. "Title Track" (Hall, Dave Rick) – 3:09
  2. "Rock-n-roll Will Never Die" (Hall, Chris Xefos) – 1:54
  3. "No Point" (Hall, Rick) – 3:35
  4. "Gary & Melissa" (Hall, Rick) – 2:18
  5. "Frightened & Freezing" (Hall, Xefos) – 2:09
  6. "How to Remember Your Dreams" (Dogbowl, Hall) – 3:06
  7. "The Fish That Played the Ponies" (Hall, Rick) – 2:36
  8. "Jesus Was Way Cool" (Hall, Xefos) – 2:42
  9. "Open" (Freeman, Hall) – 4:36
  10. "The Sandbox" (Hall, Rick) – 1:44
  11. "The Neither World" (Dogbowl, Hall) – 3:35
  12. "She Didn't Want" (Hall, Rick) – 2:47
  13. "Cheesecake Truck" (Hall, Rick) – 1:10
  14. "Equivalencies" (Hall, Rick) – 3:14
  15. "Love You More" (Pete Shelley) – 1:45
  16. "Fourthly" (Hall, Xefos) – 3:24

Fluting on the Hump

  1. "Lou" (Dogbowl, Hall) – 1:53
  2. "At Dave's" (Dogbowl, Hall) – 1:59
  3. "Muffy" (Alex DeLaszlo, Dogbowl, Hall) – 2:28
  4. "Take Stuff from Work" (Hall, King Missile) – 2:12
  5. "Sensitive Artist" (Dogbowl, Hall) – 2:38
  6. "Wuss" (Hall, King Missile) – 1:42
  7. "Heavy Holy Man" (DeLaszlo, Dogbowl, Hall) – 2:12
    • On the LP version of the album, a short instrumental called "Pygmies and Drums" appears between "Heavy Holy Man" and "Fluting on the Hump." Producer Kramer disliked the track and removed it from the CD compilation.
  8. "Fluting on the Hump" (Hall, King Missile) – 2:26
  9. "Dick" (DeLaszlo, Dogbowl, Hall) – 2:17
  10. "That Old Dog" (Dogbowl, Hall) – 2:13

Read more about this topic:  Mystical Shit & Fluting On The Hump

Famous quotes containing the word track:

    Water. Its sunny track in the plain; its splashing in the garden canal, the sound it makes when in its course it meets the mane of the grass; the diluted reflection of the sky together with the fleeting sight of the reeds; the Negresses fill their dripping gourds and their red clay containers; the song of the washerwomen; the gorged fields the tall crops ripening.
    Jacques Roumain (1907–1945)