I couldn't put together why I liked the Husk segment in Episode 6 until I realized why it was so good; it was a sinner, in Hell, succumbing to sins that had nothing to do with the overarching plot. The first time this has happened in like, the whole season? It's definitely unintentional, but there's a kind of poetry to how the most pointless song (from a story perspective) about being nostalgic and sinking deeper into old habits is the best one in the episode. A bunch of songs in the show tend to be repetitive, but this one actually makes sense, given the context.
In a show that's always oozing sex jokes, horny phrasing and a bunch of suggestive visuals, it was deeply satisfying to watch him exercise 3 of the 7 deadlies in the span of a few minutes instead of taking the audience through yet another Tunnel of Lust. Hell, you could say he hit that one with how the song's about love (of substance abuse) and the showgirls coercing him to keep playing. Just an overall lovely segment, and it's a shame we probably won't get to see this kind of thing more often.
Also Keith David's gruff voice is, again, a very welcome change amongst the usual bravado the other VAs put into their singing.