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| Length = 66:00
| Length = 66:00
| Label = [[Psychopathic Records]]
| Label = [[Psychopathic Records]]
| Producer = [[Insane Clown Posse]]<br />[[Mike E. Clark|Mike Clark]]<br />[[Esham]]<br />Chuck Miller
| Producer = [[Insane Clown Posse]]<br />[[Mike E. Clark|Mike Clark]]<br />[[Esham]]<br />Chuck Miller<br />[[Kid Rock]]
| Reviews = *[[Allmusic]] {{rating-5|3}} [http://wc03.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:jvfqxquhldfe~T1 link]
| Reviews = *[[Allmusic]] {{rating-5|3}} [http://wc03.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:jvfqxquhldfe~T1 link]
*[[Rolling Stone]] {{rating-5|1}}<ref>{{cite book |title=The New Rolling Stone Album Guide |editor=Brackett, Nathan |first= |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2004 |publisher=[[Simon and Schuster]] |location= |isbn=0743201698 |pages=405–6 }}</ref>
*[[Rolling Stone]] {{rating-5|1}}<ref>{{cite book |title=The New Rolling Stone Album Guide |editor=Brackett, Nathan |first= |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2004 |publisher=[[Simon and Schuster]] |location= |isbn=0743201698 |pages=405–6 }}</ref>

Revision as of 22:17, 14 July 2008

Untitled

Carnival of Carnage is the debut studio album by American hip hop group Insane Clown Posse, released on October 18, 1992 by Psychopathic Records.

Carnival of Carnage sold 17 copies on its release date.

Album information

It is the first Joker's Card entry in the group's Dark Carnival saga. The album is meant as a rage against the rich and the government who do not care about the "poor" neighborhoods of society; "carnival of carnage" is also a term used to describe the ghetto.

The album contains 14 studio tracks and an intro. One of the studio tracks from the album was previously released on the "Intelligence and Violence" and Dog Beats demos (the title on the former release being "Wizard of Delray"). Featured guests on the album include Kid Rock, Capitol E, Jumpsteady and Esham.

The album was remastered and re-released in 1998 by Island Records, but due to uncleared samples in select tracks, "Blackin' Your Eyes" and "Night of the Axe" were absent from the reissue. The outro to the latter is also moved to the beginning of "Psychopathic". It was once more released afterwards by Hatchet Gear with the original album's track listing, including the two previously removed tracks.

Track listing

# Title Time Writer(s) Producer(s) Guest(s)
1 "Intro" 1:20
2 "Carnival of Carnage" 2:32 Joseph Bruce
Esham A. Smith
3 "The Juggla" 4:55 Joseph Bruce Mike Clark
Joseph Bruce
4 "First Day Out" 4:20 Joseph Bruce
Joseph Utsler
Mike Clark
Joseph Bruce
5 "Red Neck Hoe" 4:50 Joseph Bruce
Joseph Utsler
Chuck Miller
Joseph Bruce
6 "Wizard of the Hood" 5:24 Joseph Bruce
Joseph Utsler
Chuck Miller
Joseph Bruce
7 "Guts on the Ceiling" 4:24 Joseph Bruce Mike Clark
Joseph Bruce
8 "Is That You?" 4:34 Joseph Bruce
R. Ritchie
Mike Clark
R. Ritchie
Kid Rock
9 "Night of the Axe" 5:00 Joseph Bruce Chuck Miller
Joseph Bruce
10 "Psychopathic" 4:43 Joseph Bruce Chuck Miller
Joseph Bruce
11 "Blackin' Your Eyes" 4:40 Joseph Bruce
Joseph Utsler
Esham A. Smith
Joseph Bruce
12 "Never Had it Made" 5:45 Joseph Bruce Mike Clark
Joseph Bruce
Esham A. Smith
13 "Your Rebel Flag" 4:23 Joseph Bruce
Joseph Utsler
Chuck Miller
Joseph Bruce
14 "Ghetto Freak Show" 4:14 Joseph Bruce Esham A. Smith
Joseph Bruce
15 "Taste" 5:10 Joseph Bruce
Robert Bruce
Joseph Utsler
Nathan Williams
Capitol E.
Esham A. Smith
Mike Clark
Joseph Bruce
Jump Steady
Capitol E.
Nate The Mack
Esham

Message

Welcome to the show, the traveling ghetto. No longer will the ghetto just be that slum that you keep your kids away from, that slum that you drive through pointing and gawking at. No longer will the ghetto just be a slum that you hear about on the news. If someone from this hell hole wanders into your neighborhood he is quickly noticed and harassed and shunned back into the home you've given him. As you watch the kids play in the park on your street you never even think about the kids in the ghetto. If you don't care, who does? Years of breathing the souls of rotted minds has created a bad case of 'Ghetto Insanity'. You walk their streets and are stared at as a freak show, less than human, an ogre walking the streets paved with gold. If those of the ghetto are nothing more than carnival exhibits to the upper class, then let's give them the show they deserve to see. No more hearing of this show because you can witness it in your own front yard! A traveling mass of carnage, the same carnage witnessed daily in the ghetto, can be yours to witness, feel and suffer. No longer killing one another, but killing the ones who have ignored our cries for help. Like a hurricane leaving a trail of destruction, the Carnival of Carnage!

Album notes

  • An unreleased radio edit of "Psychopathic" with alternate lyrics exists. [2]
  • Awesome Dre was originally going to do a verse on "Taste," but while waiting in the studio for him to arrive, I.C.P. saw Esham. Esham suggested he appear on the track instead, for the same amount of money as Awesome Dre, and I.C.P. allowed him on.[3]
  • "Carnival of Carnage" was recorded to sound almost exactly the same forwards as it does backwards.
  • "Carnival of Carnage" was originally recorded by Esham but he pronounced "carnage" as "carnicks" and refused to redo it, prompting Violent J to do it himself.[3]
  • Esham was paid $500 for his appearance on "Taste". Kid Rock demanded a hundred more than Esham, and was thus paid $600 to appear on "Is That You?"[3]
  • Kid Rock showed up to record "Is That You?" intoxicated, but re-recorded his vocals and record scratching the following day.[3]
  • "Red Neck Hoe" was re-recorded with Twiztid as special guests in 1999 for the Psychopathic Records compilation Psychopathics from Outer Space and was re-named "Red Neck Hoe '99."
  • Violent J has stated in an interview that he and Shaggy 2 Dope were not friends with or fans of Kid Rock, who appeared on the track "Is That You?". He was asked to appear mainly because of his local success in the Detroit area. However, Violent J has also stated that, as a musician, Kid Rock has paid his dues and deserved the success that he's received.[4]
  • The song "Wizard of the Hood" was derived from the tape Intelligence and Violence, originally titled "Wizard of Delray", which contains very similar lyrics and concept. It was re-worked with different lyrics for Dog Beats, which is the same version as found on Carnival of Carnage, although the version that appears here has a shorter outro. 11 years later Violent J's debut solo album Wizard of the Hood, which goes further into the story of J's trip to Oz, took its name from this song.
  • Original ICP member and brother of Shaggy 2 Dope, John Kickjazz, appeared on "Your Rebel Flag", "Psychopathic", ""Blacken' Your Eyes", "Wizard of the Hood", "Red Neck Hoe", and "Taste".[3]
  • "Psychopathic" contains a sample of the theme from the Halloween movies

Personnel

References

  1. ^ Brackett, Nathan, ed. (2004). The New Rolling Stone Album Guide. Simon and Schuster. pp. 405–6. ISBN 0743201698. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  2. ^ "Psychopathic Edited Version". Psychopathic Records. Retrieved 2008-05-28. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  3. ^ a b c d e Bruce, Joseph. "The Broken Path of a Dream". In Nathan Fostey (ed.). ICP: Behind the Paint (2nd Edition ed.). Royal Oak, Michigan: Psychopathic Records. pp. pages 189—197. ISBN 034544762X. {{cite book}}: |edition= has extra text (help); |pages= has extra text (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |origdate= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |origmonth= ignored (help)
  4. ^ "Interview with Violent J about Kid Rock". Retrieved 2007-12-05.