Stew’s second album, also released as a Negro Problem record, was 1999’s Joys and Concerns. While Post Minstrel Syndrome was a grab bag of the songs the band had played over several years leading to its release, Joys and Concerns is a more cohesive album.
With a nod to the days of vinyl, the album is broken into sides, with the first six songs labeled “Joys” and the last six “Concerns.” I don’t see a real thematic difference in the songs on each half of the record, however. In fact, one of the “Concerns” songs is just a faster-paced version of the “Joys” song ‘Comikbuchland’ (which I featured on the blog two and a half years ago).

