"Technical Difficulties" is a great showcase if one ever had to explain to someone what stream-of-consciousness rhyming is: line like "Space connected while you listen to Keith Sweat" and "Zapp like Roger."LeMayne: Now this was my first intro to this album. He name-drops Jimmy Castor and Pepto Bismol in the same verse. What the fuck is there to not like? "General Hospital" is the kind of skit that the streaming era has all but marginalized. I know that for some people they became tedious, but on albums like this, you need them. The conceptualism is what drives the whole album and there are lots of albums where you need the skits tying themes together. This is one of those albums.
"Blue Flowers" might be the best song here. DJ Qbert's scratching on the outro is one of the greatest on a surreal masterpiece. On "A Trip To the Gynecologist" I rarely, if ever, like to play the "how would this be received today" game. Keith is going for weirdness and creepiness-as-a-conceit, not endorsing creepiness as a lifestyle. It's all for the concept. And "Bear Witness" is one of the best DJ tracks of the 1990s; Qbert really is the third brain of the album. The chemistry these guys had when they were really clicking -- it's staggering.
The title track is a theme song for a time-traveling gynecologist from outer space. There's always been some back-and-forth as to who produced what, but the soundscape used here is brilliant. It seems to set the stage for what Automator would do with Del years later. And "Girl Let Me Touch You" is a love song - right? LOL It references STDs, cunnilingus, bondage and all types of other stuff. It's like a spoof of a love song. Even with the raunchy focus, it never feels all that sincere. It's still on some stream-of-consciousness shit, even if it's horny as hell. It sounds like the "Doctor" is a nymphomaniac, too.
"I'm Destructive" is the most Ultramags sounding track here, like a throwback to Critical Beatdown. "Bash in your head with ten full cans of Campbell's soup/I'm on the roof, I'm not another pigeon out the chicken coop." This shit is perfect. It's followed by "Wild & Crazy," another Ultramagnetic MCs-sounding moment on the album. Right down to the "Ego Trippin'" sample/reference. This is definitely a callback to the legacy of the Ultramags. It still has the haziness of Dr. Octagon.