Curly Toes: Difference between revisions

From Lost Waves Wiki
m (Reference reformated)
No edit summary
Line 8: Line 8:
|Search_started = 2000
|Search_started = 2000
|OP = Irwin Chusid
|OP = Irwin Chusid
|Media = curlytoesmusic.mp3
}}
}}



Revision as of 17:57, 11 May 2024

ⓘ This lostwave is classified as unsolved.

Curly Toes
Genre A capella
Year 1970s
Original poster Irwin Chusid
Search started 2000
File:Curlytoesmusic.mp3

Curly Toes is song by an unknown artist used as an example of Outsider Music released on Irwin Chusid's compilation: Songs in the Key of Z.

Discovery and Origins

In 2000, Irwin Chusid released the book and companion compilation albums: Songs in the Key of Z. This book explored the field of outsider music and presented works created by untrained or experimental artists to a wider audience, along with featuring the work of more well known performers, such as Captain Beefheart.

The 9th track on the second album was titled "Curly Toes" and was not attributed to an artist like many other tracks. This recording features a woman with a southern accent serenading her lover "Ben" as she refers to herself as "Your Curly Toes". Chusid claims the tape the song was recorded on was found in a dumpster, giving few leads to the original circumstances of its creation

Search and Status in the Lostwave Community

The origins of the search for Curly Toes have possible roots in 2010, when the song was uploaded to Youtube for the first time in a compilation video but the search truly began when it was fully posted in 2014 under the Various Artists topic on Youtube. The song was also posted on r/crappymusic and written about on the History's Dumpster blog. In 2020, the song was featured in C.W. Schultz's 10 More Mysterious Songs video, which exposed the song to a wider audience.

Within the Lostwave Community, the search for Curly Toes is pretty stagnant, as there are no leads other than Chusid, who has no other information on the origins of the song. The fact that the song was thrown away suggests the singer may not even want to be associated with the tape to begin with, making this perhaps an example of a song that was disowned.

Curly Toes has lived on with a legendary status among Lostwave fans being so widely reviled that many have taken to ironically praising it, often jokingly citing it as the best lost song. The infamy of the track has lead to many creators of lostwave tierlists putting it in its own unique category to signify its bizarre uniqueness. However, Curly Toes does have unironic fans who are endeared by the song's unpolished qualities.

References