Genuinely
shocking
or
tasteless
campy
fun?
It
was
sometimes
hard
to
tell
which
way
the
Misfits
wanted
to
be
taken
and
the
immense
cult
following
that
has
grown
up
in
the
years
after
their
actual
existence
(1977-1983)
seems
divided
in
its
own
assessment.
It
certainly
wasn't
the
Misfits'
musicianship
—
which
was
as
crude
as
the
recording
quality
of
most
of
their
oeuvre
—
that
endeared
them
to
so
many
although
Glenn
Danzig
possessed
one
of
the
most
distinctive
and
tuneful
bellows
in
hardcore
punk.
Rather
it
was
Danzig's
penchant
for
catchy
anthemic
melodies
often
delivered
at
warp
speed
and
his
lyrical
obsession
with
grade-B
horror
films
and
splatter
imagery
that
helped
the
Misfits
build
a
rabid
posthumous
following.
Name-drops
and
covers
by
metal
bands
like
Metallica
and
Guns
N'
Roses
kept
the
Misfits'
songs
circulating
during
the
mid-
to
late
'80s
when
their
tangled
discography
remained
only
sporadically
in
print
—
reissues
were
maddeningly
incomplete
and
much
of
the
band's
prime
material
was
confined
to
rare
singles
and
EPs.
The
mid-'90s
saw
a
spate
of
CD
reissues
that
while
not
quite
presenting
all
of
the
Misfits'
songs
in
the
most
concise
collectible
format
at
least
succeeded
in
getting
them
all
back
into
print
allowing
those
who
missed
the
band
the
first
time
around
to
hear
why
they've
enjoyed
such
enduring
cult
popularity