[5] The lyrics deal with English rock group The Smiths' front man, Morrissey.
[6] The single received many negative reviews but was played on John Peel's radio show.
Club as an anti-Morrisey song where the lyrics ask listeners to "imagine a nightmarish apocalypse where the fearful question on humanity's lips is 'What shall we do?
[3] For a Firm and Fruity track, "Stir Fry Baby", Australian blues musician, Chris Wilson, guested on harmonica.
The band also headlined a show at the Lansdowne in Sydney on 29 April, from which three songs would be included on their next album.
In July 1993, the band released their third and final album, The Unbearable Lightness of Being a Dickhead, which included two cover versions of Kate Bush's "Wuthering Heights".
[16] Johnson formed a new band called Poontang* that year, reusing the old Mr Floppy PO Box.
: "[w]hatever this kind of music is – I'm gonna go with pop-schlock for now–is very much the wry Melbourne type that seems to have evolved from the oval ball park of Mr Floppy (punk rock), to TISM (dance punk), through to the 5-piece of Root!