GENERICA is actually credited to the inspiringly named Stark Raving Chandler, a trio made up of singer Amanda Stark, singer/spoken-word performer Joshua Raving, and singer/songwriter/guitarist Chris Chandler. Overall, the album is a fairly standard punk-influenced folk record of the mid-'90s. "Elvis," which Chandler later reworked for his solo album CONVENIENCE STORE TROUBADOURS, is a particular highlight. Stark's vocals recall the less strident side of Ani DiFranco, and Raving's speedy performing style, seemingly influenced equally by Allen Ginsberg's recitations and the punk poets of late-'70s Britain like John Cooper Clarke and Attila the Stockbroker, is captivating, but this is largely Chandler's record; of the three, his songwriting and engagingly rough voice are the sharpest and most appealing.