The Shaggs comprised sisters Helen, Betty, and Dorothy Wiggin, from Fremont, New Hampshire, USA. They were managed by their father, Austin Wiggin, Jr., and were sometimes accompanied by another sister, Rachel. They performed almost exclusively at the Fremont town hall and at a local nursing home, beginning in 1968 and ending in 1973. Although most people in Fremont disregarded the band's sound, their father still believed they would be stars, and in 1969 used most of his savings to record an album. Austin drove the girls down to a studio in Massachusetts, determined to get them on tape "while they were still hot". Striking a deal with a local fly-by-night record company, Third World Recordings, they recorded their debut album in one day, recording a dozen tunes written by Dot. Upon the first original pressing, 900 of the original 1,000 copies of the album vanished out of the warehouse, and shortly thereafter the record company's producer/president also vanished and the label quickly folded. Despite the setback, music collectors quickly got a hold of the remaining copies and word of mouth started, with those who liked it giving almost universal praise, but with many others complaining of the sloppy, almost nonsensical way the arrangements were made as well as the singing. Some claimed this was done intentionally at the urging of their father. The Wiggin sisters themselves have expressed dismay with the finished product, noting that several of the quirks in the musicianship were in fact rhythm mistakes that were left in; this was a factor in the band's breakup and their reluctance to reunite in the wake of their newfound success. By the mid-1970s WBCN, a local radio station in Boston, Massachusetts, began playing a few cuts from the record, helping to bring the group and the record belated fame. It became further known in 1978 when famed independent music band NRBQ listened in, sought out a copy, then had it re-released in 1980 on the Red Rooster Records/Rounder Records label. Later, Dr. Demento, an American radio broadcaster and record collector specializing in novelty songs, comedy, and strange or unusual recordings, began to play the album almost exclusively on his radio show nationwide, especially around the holiday Halloween when he would play the album track "It's Halloween", and for many years since it became part of his top "Funny Five" recordings of the week. The Wiggin sisters have consistently expressed confusion and surprise in regard to why their music had become so popular, noting that the work was largely an accident.
Other versions
Later a CD version of the album, which also contained their follow-up album Shaggs' Own Thing was released in 1988 by Rounder, and another CD of just the original first album was released by RCA Victorin 1999. Light In The Attic Records reissued the album on vinyl, and in September 2016 issued a 180g three-color vinyl edition, which was limited to 500 copies, and included a booklet with rare photos and an extensive background essay on the history of the band and the recording of the album. The title song appears as the first track on the first volume of Songs in the Key of Z: The Curious Universe of Outsider Music.
Reception
"Philosophy of the World is the sickest, most stunningly awful wonderful record I've heard in ages: the perfect mental purgative for doldrums of any kind," wrote Debra Rae Cohen for Rolling Stone in a review of the 1980 reissue. "Like a lobotomized Trapp Family Singers, the Shaggs warble earnest greeting-card lyrics in happy, hapless quasi-unison along ostensible lines of melody while strumming their tinny guitars like someone worrying a zipper. The drummer pounds gamely to the call of a different muse, as if she had to guess which song they were playing - and missed every time." "Without exaggeration," Chris Connelly wrote in a later Rolling Stone article, "it may stand as the worst album ever recorded." In an article for The New Yorker, the album was described as "hauntingly bad". Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain listed Philosophy of the World as his fifth favorite album of all time. The record has also been cited as highly influential by Frank Zappa, Kimya Dawson of The Moldy Peaches, and Deerhoof. The album is ranked number 100 in Blender 's 100 Greatest Indie-Rock Albums Ever. In 2010, it was included in NME's "The 100 Greatest Albums You've Never Heard" list..In 2016, Rolling Stone ranked the album at 17 on its list of "40 Greatest One-Album Wonders".
Track listing
All songs written and arranged by Dorothy Wiggin. ;Side one
"Philosophy of the World" – 2:56
"That Little Sports Car" – 2:06
"Who Are Parents?" – 2:58
"My Pal Foot Foot" – 2:31
"My Companion" – 2:04
"I'm So Happy When You're Near" – 2:12
;Side two
"Things I Wonder" – 2:12
"Sweet Thing" – 2:57
"It's Halloween" – 2:22
"Why Do I Feel?" – 3:57
"What Should I Do?" – 2:18
"We Have a Savior" – 3:06
Personnel
Dorothy Wiggin: lead guitar, vocals
Betty Wiggin Porter: rhythm guitar, vocals
Helen Wiggin: drums
Rachel Wiggin: bass guitar on "That Little Sports Car"
Production
Produced by Austin Wiggin, Terry Adams and Charlie Dreyer
Recorded and engineered by Bob Olive and Austin Wiggin