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       A sequel of sorts to Camper Van Chadbourne, the 1987 collaboration between 
        Eugene Chadbourne and Camper Van Beethoven, The Eddie Chatterbox Double 
        Trio Love Album features a six-man ("double trio") band half 
        comprised of CVB members. The album is split between five of Chadbourne's 
        originals and five fairly straightforward covers of Tim Buckley songs. 
        Chadbourne's songs are fully realized, accessible compositions that rank 
        among his best, particularly the hilarious "Life x 2" and "Used 
        Record Pile." The heavy metal parody "Voodoo Vengeance" 
        resurfaced a year later in a different recording on the Monks of Doom's 
        album The Cosmodemonic Telegraph Company. The political content is unusually 
        low on this outing except for "Sword + Shield," a general critique 
        of Star Wars-type defense programs. The band works up the same kind of 
        horns-and-strings cacophony heard on Camper Van Chadbourne, sounding like 
        a Salvation Army band tooting through the apocalypse, with a few extended 
        jams and noise-fests Chadbourne fans have come to love or tolerate. The 
        Buckley songs show Chadbourne's sensitive side and fall in line with his 
        ongoing tributes to the work of great songwriters. Whether or not it was 
        Camper Van Beethoven's influence that ushered him toward conventionality, 
        Chadbourne's collaborations with CVB are among his most approachable efforts. 
       
      (by Greg Adams, All 
        Music Guide) 
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