You can hear strains of everything from Tom Waits and Kurt Weill to The Doors and The Pogues in the morbidly rollicking sounds of Mr. Lewis & The Funeral 5. The sextet’s sophomore album, Delirium Tremendous, mixes splashes of New Orleans jazz, European cabaret, and ’60-style garage rock into an intoxicating sonic cocktail. Frontman Gregory Lewis sings with a deranged Jim Morrison-style croon, conveying maniacal delight (and a hint of primal fear) as his band seethes, stomps, and slides behind him. “I Found Love on the Highway,” “Underneath a Burning Bridge,” and “Tuesday’s the New Monday” are twisted excursions into dark terrain that envelop the listener in leering horns, barbed-wire guitar licks, and splashy, pummeling drums. “Into the Woods” is a woozy Grimms' Fairy Tales soundtrack piece, while the title tune radiates bluesy midnight menace. The band quiets down for the slinky, Latin-inflected “Running into a Clothesline” and the snappy vaudeville number “Heavy Bags in Tow.” A tormented Threepenny Opera–style cover of The Kinks’ “Alcohol” adds extra kick to the band’s originals.