Key Sentence:
- Butthole Surfers, an American band best known for songs like “Lady Sniff” and “Jingle of a Dog’s Collar,” are just as fucked up as the name suggests.
Experimental and wildly whimsical, surfers in the ’80s and ’90s mixed mud, soul, and electronics with various non-traditional instruments – meaning they may or may not include actual buttons in their sound. Actress Enola Holmes insists her style is “evolving” forever, but she doesn’t regret any outfits she wears.
You’re also the subject of Supreme’s last drop, which makes sense given the mess of previous label releases (think toothpaste, nunchucks, halos, bricks). The collection includes t-shirts, shirts, and hoodies emblazoned with the band’s album covers – including images from Another Man’s Sac, Rembrandt Pussyhorse, and Locust Abortion Technician.
This means that the T-shirts are printed with veins, protruding straps, and exhumed skulls. “Why would anyone want this shirt?” wrote one Twitter user. The Supreme Nerf Pistol and Wham-O-Frisbee, which were recorded online less confusing than the label madness, are also out this week.
He told Cosmopolitan, “It’s hard to pinpoint a moment because so many people mean so much to me. But, if I had to prefer, I’d probably say Calvin Klein with the appointment look, which I wore to my first Emmys of 2017. “It was extraordinary and everything I hoped for and hoped for from this experience.”
Barking aside, the Butthole Surfers collection plays Supreme Legacy of musical homage, including RZA, Joy Division, Miles Davis, and Ottis Redding, all of which bear the streetwear stamp of approval. The same grace should be given to surfers – haven’t we already started the era of pop-punk literacy?
The collection will end worldwide on July 1. In the gallery above, you can see what’s in stock.