Lyrics by Puffball

Do you love Puffball's songs? Here you'll find the lyrics to Puffball's songs so you can sing them at the top of your lungs, make your own versions, or simply understand them properly.

Find here the lyrics to your favorite songs by Puffball.

Do you see the song you like in this list of Puffball's songs?

  1. (You Will) Know My Name
  2. B-Body
  3. Back On The Sauce
  4. Barracuda
  5. Blacksick
  6. Blown To Bits
  7. Bullet Train To Hell
  8. Carmelita
  9. Cluster Of Bad Luck
  10. Constant Rotation
  11. Crackhouse Bonanza
  12. Cramp Your Style
  13. Crash Into Oblivion
  14. Delirium Boy
  15. Do It All Again
  16. Doctor Dipstick
  17. Down At The Stoup
  18. Evil Come Evil Go
  19. Fridgeking
  20. Hands That Bleed
  21. Hellbent
  22. Hemihead
  23. High Powered
  24. Holiday On Ice
  25. Hot Skin Cold Cash
  26. I Drink Poison
  27. I Own The Road
  28. In The Black
  29. Jump The Rails
  30. Killing Time
  31. King Of The Dragsters
  32. Legalize Crime
  33. Like Men Possessed
  34. Loaded
  35. Make It Move
  36. Matt Walker
  37. Motorpsycho
  38. Noone Knows I'm Bad
  39. Outlaw Screamer
  40. Parasite City
  41. Petroleum
  42. Pick Me Up
  43. Powder Meet
  44. Salt Tongue
  45. Scat Pack Sue
  46. Shut Up
  47. So Where´s Your Vision?
  48. Starecase
  49. Strip Noise
  50. Stuck
  51. Superbee
  52. Supersonic
  53. Surrender To Sin
  54. The Pace That Kills
  55. Think For Myself
  56. Too Mean To Die
  57. Topblower
  58. Troublestarter
  59. Unglued
  60. Whiningland
  61. Zippo Queen

Puffballs are a type of fungus featuring a ball-shaped fruit body that (when mature) bursts on contact or impact, releasing a cloud of dust-like spores into the surrounding area. Puffballs belong to the division Basidiomycota and encompass several genera, including Calvatia, Calbovista and Lycoperdon. The puffballs were previously treated as a taxonomic group called the Gasteromycetes or Gasteromycetidae, but they are now known to be a polyphyletic assemblage. The distinguishing feature of all puffballs is that they do not have an open cap with spore-bearing gills. Instead, spores are produced internally, in a spheroidal fruit body called a gasterothecium (gasteroid 'stomach-like' basidiocarp). As the spores mature, they form a mass called a gleba in the centre of the fruitbody that is often of a distinctive color and texture. The basidiocarp remains closed until after the spores have been released from the basidia. Eventually, it develops an aperture, or dries, becomes brittle, and splits, and the spores escape. The spores of puffballs are statismospores rather than ballistospores, meaning they are not forcibly extruded from the basidium. Puffballs and similar forms are thought to have evolved convergently (that is, in numerous independent events) from Hymenomycetes by gasteromycetation, through secotioid stages. Thus, 'Gasteromycetes' and 'Gasteromycetidae' are now considered to be descriptive, morphological terms (more properly gasteroid or gasteromycetes, to avoid taxonomic implications) but not valid cladistic terms. True puffballs do not have a visible stalk or stem, while stalked puffballs do have a stalk that supports the gleba. None of the stalked puffballs are edible as they are tough and woody mushrooms. The Hymenogastrales and Enteridium lycoperdon, a slime mold, are the false puffballs. A gleba which is powdery on maturity is a feature of true puffballs, stalked puffballs and earthstars. False puffballs are hard like rock or brittle. All false puffballs are inedible, as they are tough and bitter to taste. The genus Scleroderma, which has a young purple gleba, should also be avoided. Puffballs were traditionally used in Tibet for making ink by burning them, grinding the ash, then putting them in water and adding glue liquid and "a nye shing ma decoction", which, when pressed for a long time, made a black dark substance that was used as ink. Rural Americans burned the common puffball with some kind of bee smoker to anesthetize honey bees as a means to safely procure honey; the practice later inspired experimental medicinal application of the puffball smoke as a surgical general anesthetic in 1853.

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