Viagra Boys' Cave World: Degenerates, Shrimp, and Mass Hysteria
Viagra Boys made a party album about paranoia.
On the surface, Cave World is chaotic, funny, and completely unhinged—shrimp references, absurd lyrics, and grooves that feel like they belong in a sweaty club at 1 a.m. But the deeper you go, the more it starts to feel like something else entirely.
This is an album about conspiracy, social breakdown, masculinity, and the strange headspace a lot of people found themselves in coming out of the pandemic. It’s satire, but it doesn’t always announce itself that way. Sometimes it’s obvious. Sometimes it’s uncomfortable. And sometimes it’s both at once.
In this episode of Self Titled, Seth and Jordan break down Cave World track by track—talking about the band’s sound, their live shows, the humor, the paranoia, and why this might be one of the most fun (and quietly sharp) records of the last few years.
Also… we try to make sense of the shrimp thing.
Topics covered:
* Why Cave World works as both a party record and a critique
* Viagra Boys’ place in the modern post-punk wave
* The band’s obsession with devolution, paranoia, and absurdity
* Live show experiences (and why they matter for this band)
* Track-by-track highlights and standout moments
If you’ve never listened to Viagra Boys, this might be the perfect place to start.
If you have, you probably already know—this band doesn’t sound like anyone else.