The West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band - Where's My Daddy?

Where's My Daddy?
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Album Details: Where's My Daddy?

Release Date:01/01/1969
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Track List: Where's My Daddy?

  1. Where's My Daddy?
  2. Where Money Rules Everything
  3. Hup Two! Hup Two!
  4. My Dog Back Home
  5. Give Me Your Lovething
  6. Outside/Inside
  1. Everyone's Innocent Daughter
  2. Free as a Bird
  3. Not One Bummer
  4. Have You Met My Pet Pig
  5. Coming of Age in L.A.
  6. Two People

Pro Reviews: Where's My Daddy?

  • All Music Guide

    When the West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band were booted by Reprise following the commercial failure of their three albums for the label, their former producer Jimmy Bowen signed the band to his own Amos) label for a follow-up. The result, 1969's Where's My Daddy?, surely must qualify as one of the creepier musical efforts of its year. Even without prior knowledge of bandleader and lyricist Bob Markley's later descent into severe mental problems, not to mention a string of arrests involving underage girls, the lyrics of this album are disturbing; with that background, some of them are downright horrifying. A concept album of sorts, Where's My Daddy? charts the odyssey of "Poor Patty" (possibly the barefoot ten-year-old street kid pictured on the album's sleeve) through the post-Summer of Love bad trips of the Los Angeles street scene. From the Lolita-like innuendoes of "Everyone's Innocent Daughter" to the climactic "Two People," which ends up with a beaten and raped Patty pleading he...r case to a disinterested judge, side two of Where's My Daddy? is like one of those cautionary morality films of the '40s and '50s as reinterpreted by Dennis Hopper's character from Blue Velvet. The music seems almost secondary, with most of the brief tracks consisting of little more than one or two-chord vamps under Markley's increasingly fragmented and freaky story. More of an album to be marveled at than enjoyed, Where's My Daddy? holds a certain psychological fascination, but it's neither particularly musically competent nor salacious enough to be perversely titillating. Mostly it's just kind of sad. - Stewart Mason, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

The West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band

If a band could ever be called an average psychedelic group, the West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band fit the bill. This somewhat mysterious collection of L.A. players issued several albums in the late '60s that plugged into the era's standard folk-rock, freakouts, and trippy lyrics without establishing a solid identity of their own. But because the currents they were r... Read more