The album opens with the supernatural-themed "Lay of the Land", which starts with a chant taken from the television series
The Quatermass Conclusion. One of three songs on the album co-written by
Mark E. Smith and
Brix Smith, it was described by Bob Nickas and Nikholis Planck in their book on the album as "sinister
rockabilly with swirling guitars, doubled bass (
Karl Burns also played bass on this song), double drums, and that killer riff from Brix". "2 x 4" features
Steve Hanley's bass prominently, Nickas and Planck considering it the lead instrument on the song. "Copped It" (one of two songs on the album to feature guest vocals from
Gavin Friday of the
Virgin Prunes) continued Mark E. Smith's common lyrical theme of criticism of the music scene. The last song on side one, "Elves", bears a strong resemblance to
the Stooges' "
I Wanna Be Your Dog". Lyrically it was seen as chastising younger bands, with Mark E. Smith commenting that he was "trying to write about how shitty all Scottish groups are, and how Scottish groups always lecture everybody on how they are from Scotland, and how hard up they are." Side two opens with "Slang King", which references "
The Four of Us Are Dying", an episode of
The Twilight Zone. "Bug Day" was seen as "revealing [Mark E.] Smith's interest in
dub, and locking his band in a groove". "Stephen Song" is the second song to feature Gavin Friday. "Craigness" has one of Mark E. Smith's downstairs neighbours as its subject, although whether real or fictional is not clear. The album closes with "Disney's Dream Debased", inspired by an incident from the Smiths' visit to
Disneyland in January 1984. After they got off the
Matterhorn Bobsleds ride, Mark E. Smith was upset and decided the ride was evil; shortly afterwards a female passenger was thrown from the ride and decapitated by an oncoming car, with visitors comforted by employees dressed as Disney characters. == Recording and release ==