CROWNED HEADS LAS CALAVERAS EDICIĆN LIMITADA 2021 | CIGAR REVIEW
- Phil Kurut, Comedy - Cigars - Music
- Dec 24, 2021
- 3 min read
DECEMBER 24, 2021 - PHIL KURUT, COMEDY - CIGARS - MUSIC
CROWNED HEADS LAS CALAVERAS EDICIĆN LIMITADA 2021 LC54 (5 3/4 x 54)
WRAPPER: ECUADORIAN SUMATRA OSCURO
BINDER: NICARAGUA
FILLER: NICARAGUA
The Las Calaveras appears to be a well put together cigar with aromas of wood, barnyard, prune, and wine from the foot and wrapper. Not sure what kind of wine, as Iām not a wine drinker, but Iāve smelled wine. For all I know, it could be the Walmart special or some rare and obscure wine snobās favorite. No clue.

Earth, dirty toast, and something sweet provide the intro of the Las Calaveras song. I hope it doesnāt turn into a rap song. As Iām about to describe the draw as smooth and easy, a bit of spice begins to join the tune, catching my attention.
I canāt tell if this is a guitar solo type of song yet. Definitely not a hair band guitar solo. I would take a Joey Santiago guitar solo any day. Heās the lead guitarist for the Pixies. Theyāre a rock band. They happen to be my favorite band. Again, Iām a plethora of information.
Muffled marshmallow adds understated percussion, and some fruit pops in some guitar accents. The type of accents you hear when you go back and really listen to a song. The singer has yet to utter a word. Long intro. Reminds me of a guitar player who used to write these long guitar intros, which went on for about a minute and a half, and then he would say, āOkay, this is where you come in.ā The bass player and I teased him relentlessly, convincing him to keep his guitar intros to about 30 seconds. Still not sure who won that battle. Also, excellent smoke output.

Shoe leather pops in out of nowhere, apparently opting to bring a kazoo into the mix. Now, a kazoo can be a great instrument when used in the right spot, but it seems like it missed the mark. I would have preferred a theremin. Grossly underrated, but still to be used sparingly. That shoe leather fails to linger too long, and earth and spice share a subtle dance through the retrohale. Remember when ska bands had a random guy dancing on stage with them. Wonder how much he got paid.
Still no singer. Probably backstage drinking too much, which totally wonāt affect his performance (big eye roll), or heās ditched the band to become a world-renowned stomp poet. Not sure which is worse. Fruit lingers a bit, leaning towards grape and raisin. Makes sense. Sometimes juicy, sometimes not.
Shoe leather, out of nowhere, begins to completely steal the show here. Dang it. Is the bass player trying to compensate for the singer again? Ugh. So, weāre still in the intro, the bass player has cued everyone else to fade out, and itās now just a bass line with the bass player trying out the song the rest of the band already vetoed. Dang it, Bob!
Hereās the thing, Bob. The song structure (burn, draw, smoke output) is solid. Itās the other stuff (shoe leather) thatās bringing the song down. Have you thought about not singing about your dogā¦in a high-pitched voiceā¦with a bass solo underneath? Bob? Oh great. Heās reaching for the triangle. Where the heck is Damian?! Heās the singer. Apparently.

I really want to like this band. Mainly because I paid admission, and, also, because I paid admission. At this point of shoe leather, I would give anything for a minute and a half guitar intro. The bass player is now talking to the audience about improv soloing with a didgeridooā¦which heās never actually played. Bob, leave the didgeridoo alone. Itās actually kind of cool, and youāre just going to make me hate it.
Muffled shoe leather and spice. Bob now negotiates with the drummer to let him try doing some kind of drum solo while playing the bass, triangle, and didgeridoo. The sound guy slowly turns off the drum mics. Thanks, Henry. Heās the sound guy. Apparently.
I take a swig of chocolate milk. Now Iām getting some chocolate notes, which were not at all influenced by the chocolate milk I just drank. Just kidding. I donāt have any chocolate milk with me. Also, thereās no chocolate notes.
Well, this review might have went a little long. Must have been inspired by one of those prog-rock bands that feel compelled to relay a novel through their songs. āFor our next song, a 30 minute ode to warlocks and martians. Itās in a crazy time signature. Clap alongā¦if you dare! Thank you, Cincinnati!ā

SMOKE TIME: 1 hr. 40 mins.
RATING: 1.75 / 4 - Cincinnati never saw it coming.
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