She told her daughter to "not be so wild", and commented that the Mississippi River is "so deep and wide I can stand right here, see my babe from the other side."
[5] In one scene, Crumb talks about his love for old blues, country and jazz music from the 1920s and 1930s and puts a record on the needle.
The soundtrack then plays "Last Kind Words" over a series of strange and disturbing images from Crumb's comics.
Yet, as Crumb himself pointed out in interviews, he does not actually own "Last Kind Words" on shellac, since original pressings of this record are extraordinarily rare.
[6] On Crumb's official website, he declared "Last Kind Words"; "the greatest female vocal.".