Carnival of Carnage
Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox album
Carnival of Carnage is the debut studio album by American hip hop duo Insane Clown Posse, released on October 18, 1992, by Psychopathic Records.
Recording sessions for the album took place from 1991 to 1992 at Miller Midi Productions and The Tempermill Studio. The album is the first Joker's Card in the group's Dark Carnival mythology. The album's lyrics describe the Carnival of Carnage as a representation of the violence that occurs within the ghettos, which takes the form of a traveling carnival to enact the same brutality on the upper class.
Carnival of Carnage was the first album on which Insane Clown Posse collaborated with producer Mike E. Clark, who would work with the group throughout much of their career. It features guest appearances by popular Detroit rappers Esham and Kid Rock. The album features the only recorded appearances of member John Kickjazz (John Utsler), who left the group prior to the album's release.
An accompanying extended play titled Beverly Kills 50187 was released on July 16, 1993.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> The group felt that they should release EPs in between their studio albums during the Dark Carnival series, in order to build and satisfy their fanbase.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Conception
Background
Template:Main Joseph Bruce and Joseph Utsler formed a hip hop group in 1990.<ref name="BehindthePaint539">Template:Cite book</ref> Under the stage names Violent J, 2 Dope, and John Kickjazz, the group began performing at local night clubs under the name of their gang, Inner City Posse.<ref name="BehindthePaint539"/> By late 1991, the group had invested more money into production than was covered by returns. They decided that their gangsta rap style was the cause of the problem: most emcees at the time used similar styles, making it difficult for Inner City Posse to distinguish itself stylistically.<ref name="BehindthePaint151">Template:Cite book</ref> Bruce suggested the band instead adapt a style similar to the hallucinatory, surrealistic "acid rap" of fellow Detroit rapper Esham, in a bid to have Detroit represent acid rap, much as Los Angeles represented gangsta rap. The group agreed, but not to copying the style of Esham closely. Instead, they suggested using horror-themed lyrics as an emotional outlet for all their negative life experiences. They were also unanimous in deciding not to rap openly about Satan, which Esham often did.<ref name="BehindthePaint151"/>
After the change in musical style, the group decided that it needed a new name. Utsler suggested keeping the "I.C.P." initials to inform the community that Inner City Posse was not defunct, an idea to which the group agreed.<ref name="BehindthePaint151"/> Several names were considered before Bruce recalled his dream of a clown running around in Delray, which became the inspiration for the group's new name, Insane Clown Posse. The other members agreed, deciding that they would take on this new genre and name, and would all don face paint due to the success of their former clown-painted hype man.<ref name="BehindthePaint151"/>
Recording
Carnival of Carnage began recording at Miller Midi Productions in Detroit, Michigan with Chuck Miller producing and mastering the album.<ref name="BehindthePaint151"/> Miller charged the group US$6,000 to produce the songs "Red Neck Hoe," "Psychopathic," "Your Rebel Flag," and part of "Night of the Axe."<ref name="BehindthePaint188">Template:Cite book</ref> Seeing that they were being overcharged, Alex Abbiss made his first major managerial move by finding another producer, Mike E. Clark.<ref name="BehindthePaint188"/> The group finished recording the album with Clark at The Tempermill Studio in Ferndale, Michigan. Clark mastered his part of the album at Rythmatic Studio, and continued to work with the group throughout their career.
Original group member John Kickjazz appeared on the songs "Your Rebel Flag", "Psychopathic", "Blacken' Your Eyes", "Wizard of the Hood", "Red Neck Hoe" and "Taste".<ref name="BehindthePaint189">Template:Cite book</ref> "Carnival of Carnage" was originally recorded by Esham at Hells Doors Studio, but he pronounced "carnage" as "carnicks" and refused to redo it.<ref name="BehindthePaint189"/> The final version of the song was recorded by Joseph Bruce over a reversed recording of the original.<ref name="BehindthePaint189"/>
Awesome Dre was originally going to do a verse on "Taste." While Insane Clown Posse waited in the studio for him to arrive, Esham suggested that he appear on the track instead for the same amount of money, and the group allowed him to record a verse. Esham was paid $500 for his appearance.<ref name="BehindthePaint189"/> Kid Rock demanded a hundred more than Esham, and was paid $600 to appear on "Is That You?"<ref name="BehindthePaint189"/> He showed up to record the song intoxicated, but re-recorded his vocals and record scratching the following day.<ref name="BehindthePaint189"/>
Joker's Cards
Carnival of Carnage is the first Joker's Card in Insane Clown Posse's Dark Carnival concept album series.<ref name="McIver">Template:Cite book</ref> The Dark Carnival is a concept of the afterlife in which souls are sent to a form of limbo while waiting to be sent to heaven or hell based on their individual actions. These concepts are related by Insane Clown Posse in a series of albums called the six Joker's Cards. Each of the six Joker's Cards relate to a specific character — an entity of the Dark Carnival — that tries to "save the human soul" by showing the wicked inside of one's self.<ref name="BehindthePaint174">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Friedman">Template:Cite news</ref>
This Joker's Card is a representation of the ghettos and the violence that occurs within them.<ref name="Apollo">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="COC">Insane Clown Posse (1992). Carnival of Carnage. Liner notes. Psychopathic Records. Template:UPC</ref> It takes the form of a traveling carnival which releases the same brutality on those who have ignored the inner cities' cries for help.<ref name="COC"/> The Card issues a warning against the upper-class and government's negligence toward the lower classes.<ref name="Apollo"/><ref name="COC"/> The cover of Carnival of Carnage was drawn by Joseph Utsler, who would later create artwork for the rest of the albums in the Joker's Cards series.<ref name="BehindthePaint539"/>
Samples
- "Carnival of Carnage" samples "Life" by Sly and the Family Stone<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- "The Juggla" samples "Kiss" by Prince and the Revolution and "The Show Must Go On" by Three Dog Night<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- "Red Neck Hoe" samples "City, Country, City" by War<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- "Is That You?" samples "Back from the Dead" and "Yo-da-lin in the Valley" by Kid Rock<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- "Psychopathic" samples "Halloween Theme - Main Title" by John Carpenter, "The Murder" by Bernard Herrmann, and "More Bounce to the Ounce" by Zapp<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- "Blackin' Your Eyes" samples "I Wanna Sex You Up" by Color Me Badd and "Funky President (People It's Bad)" by James Brown<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- "Never Had it Made" samples "The Wizard" by Black Sabbath and "Pass the Mic" by Beastie Boys<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- "Ghetto Freak Show" samples "I'd Rather be Dead" by Esham<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
- "Taste" samples "Brother Green (the Disco King)" by Roy Ayers Ubiquity, "Word After Word" by Esham, "The Crunge" by Led Zeppelin, "Melting Pot" by Booker T. & the M.G.'s and "I Believe in Miracles" by the Jackson Sisters<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Lyricism
Joseph Bruce uses elements of political hip hop throughout the album. Many of his lyrics were derived from his experiences of growing up in a poor family that was neglected by the government. He and his brother Robert used to escape from their impoverished reality by gathering themselves in a forest called "Picker Forest". Joe cites "Picker Forest" as a strong influence on the Dark Carnival mythology which began with this album.<ref name="BehindthePaint43">Template:Cite book</ref> The themes of the Dark Carnival also derived from a dream Bruce had shortly after the group adopted its new name, in which spirits in a traveling carnival appeared to him.<ref name="BehindthePaint151"/>
"Red Neck Hoe" and "Your Rebel Flag" stem from the group's anti-bigotry philosophy, based on various experiences witnessed by Bruce.<ref name="BehindthePaint106">Template:Cite book</ref> As a teenager, he had briefly lived in Bonnie Doone, North Carolina, a trailer park town just outside Fort Bragg, where his brother Robert had been staying with the U.S. Army. There, Joseph witnessed open racism directed toward African American citizens, as well as the minorities serving in the Army, and became disgusted and infuriated with the actions that took place.<ref name="BehindthePaint106"/> "Wizard of the Hood" was originally written by Bruce sometime in the late 1980s.<ref name="Bruce-151">Template:Cite book</ref> The first recorded version of the song appeared on the Intelligence and Violence EP under the name "Wizard of Delray."<ref name="Bruce-151"/> The Carnival of Carnage version is derived from a 1991 recording which appeared on the EP Dog Beats.<ref name="Bruce-151"/>
Release
Just weeks prior to the release of their album, John left the group because he felt that it was "taking up too much of [his] life."<ref name="BehindthePaint189"/> When Bruce and Utsler attempted to call a meeting to talk about the issues, John did not attend.<ref name="BehindthePaint189"/> Carnival of Carnage was released on October 18, 1992, with distribution within a Template:Convert radius of Detroit.<ref name="BehindthePaint188"/> Carnival of Carnage sold 17 copies on its release date.<ref name="GOTJ2002">Template:Cite video</ref> The number would become a reoccurring theme in Insane Clown Posse's work throughout much of the following decade. A condensed extended play featuring eight selected tracks from Carnival of Carnage was pressed on vinyl in hopes that DJs would play the songs in Detroit-area nightclubs.<ref name="BehindthePaint539"/> When Carnival of Carange was released, Psychopathic records printed it onto cassette tapes, as they could not afford to press CDs for the album. It was released onto CD in 1994 along with their second album Ringmaster, and sold "twice as fast."
A remastered CD copy of the album was included in the 2015 box set The First Six, along with Ringmaster, Riddle Box, The Great Milenko, The Amazing Jeckel Brothers, The Wraith: Shangri-la, Hell's Pit, and an exclusive bonus CD House of Wax.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
Reception
Template:Album ratings Although Carnival of Carnage was not reviewed at the time of its release, later reviews of the album have been unfavorable. AllMusic reviewer Stephen Thomas Erlewine gave the album three out of five stars, comparing the group's performance on the album to "a third-rate Beastie Boys supported by a cut-rate Faith No More, all tempered with the sensibility that made GWAR cult heroes—only with [...] more sexism and jokes that are supposed to be street, but wind up sounding racist", but stating that the album would appeal to fans of the group.<ref name="AMGHipHop">Template:Cite book</ref> In The Great Rock Discography, Martin Charles Strong gave the album four out of ten stars.<ref name="Strong">Template:Cite book</ref> The album received one star out of five in The New Rolling Stone Album Guide, in which Ben Sisario panned it (along with the rest of the group's discography before The Great Milenko) as "gangsta-inspired wigga posturing".<ref name="RSAlbumGuide"/>
Legacy
In 1997, Twiztid released a cover of the song "First Day Out" on the duo's debut album, Mostasteless.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 1998, the album was reissued by Island Records without the tracks "Blackin' Your Eyes" and "Night of the Axe."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The original version continues to be sold by Psychopathic Records.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> By 2010, the album had sold well enough to become eligible for gold certification by the RIAA.<ref name="PRNewswire">Template:Cite web</ref> In the Aqua Teen Hunger Force episode "Juggalo", Bruce and Utsler appear as themselves during a trial after Master Shake commits suicide. George Lowe asks "Mr. 2 Dope" to read lyrics from "Blackin' Your Eyes".
25th anniversary
In 2017, it was announced that Insane Clown Posse was going to perform the album in its entirety at the "El Club" (which holds 600 people), located in southwest Detroit directly across the street from Clark Park right in the heart of ICP's stomping ground when they were younger. It was also announced that the performance would only be a one-time event, and tickets would be $250, with all proceeds going directly to the people making the documentary about John Kickjazz titled The Third Clown. It was also said that John and Shaggy 2 Dope's little brother Tre Pound of Chop Shop would fill in for John. Later on it was announced that for the first time in 25 years Inner City Posse would be performing, and they would wear no makeup. Also a 25th anniversary vinyl version will be available. On August 25, 2017, the lineup for the show was announced, including Rude Boys son DJ Carlito performing (playing music) in between sets, as well as an after party at "MJ's":<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Track listing
Template:Tracklist Template:Track listing
Personnel
- Joseph "Violent J" Bruce – vocals, production (tracks: 2-7, 9-15)
- Joseph "2 Dope" Utsler – vocals, scratching
- John Utsler "Kickjazz" – vocals (tracks: 5, 13, 15)
- Mike E. Clark – production (tracks: 3-4, 7-8, 12, 15)
- Chuck Miller – production (tracks: 5-6, 9-10, 13)
- Esham A. Smith – feature (track: 15), production (tracks: 1, 11-12, 14)
- Robert "Kid Rock" Ritchie – feature (track: 8), scratching (track: 8)
- Robert "Jumpsteady" Bruce – feature (track: 15)
- Erik "Capitol E" Perry – feature (track: 15)
- Nate "The Mack" Williams – feature (track: 15)
- John "Kid Villain" Rode – feature (track: 6)
Certifications
Template:Certification Table Top Template:Certification Table Entry Template:Certification Table Bottom
References
Template:Insane Clown Posse Template:Portalbar Template:Good article