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Insane Clown Posse are a cartoonish metal/rap band with a vaunted live show
that featured open fires, chainsaws, liters of soda dousing the audience (Faygo
being the group's favorite brand), and more emphasis on performance art than
the performance of music. In the world of the late '90s, that was more than
enough to get them a recording contract with a major label, though the
release of their 1997 album The Great Milenko came with a bit of controversy.
Now just a duo, ICP were originally formed in 1989 as a hardcore Detroit rap
group called Inner City Posse.
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After combusting in 1991, the only members left, Violent J (born Joseph
Bruce) and Shaggy 2 Dope (born Joseph Utsler), slightly altered the name to
reflect the fact that they had been visited by the Carnival Spirit, which
ordered them to carry word of the impending apocalypse by touring the nation
and releasing six "Joker Cards" (popularly known as LPs) with successive
revelations of the final judgment. The first, Carnival of Carnage, appeared
in 1992 on their own Psychopathic Records label. The group became notorious
in Detroit's underground scene, but several tours around the region failed
to ignite much more than the rage of area leaders. After the release of
1994's The Ringmaster, ICP began to get a bit of attention as a possible
follower of cartoon metal bands like Gwar and Green Jelly. Jive Records
signed the group and released The Riddle Box in 1995, but the record bombed
and ICP returned to the ranks of the indies. Just one year later, Hollywood
Records gambled on the band and spent more than one million dollars while
ICP recorded their new album, The Great Milenko. On the day of release in
1997, however, Hollywood pulled the record, citing obscene lyrics and
gruesome content -- possibly a move by its owner, Disney, to deflect
criticism of its practices by the Southern Baptist Federation. In a bizarre
twist, yet another major label, Island Records, stepped in to release the
album and capitalize on the notoriety ICP had garnered. That notoriety only
increased thanks to several incidents that kept them in the headlines: J was
arrested after clubbing an audience member with his microphone in late 1997,
and shortly thereafter, the group's tour bus ran off the road, leaving J
with a concussion. Next, the group and their entourage were involved in a
brawl at a Waffle House in Indiana, and both members eventually pleaded
guilty to disorderly conduct charges. All the chaos took its toll, as J
suffered a panic attack in April 1998 while on-stage in Minnesota. However,
all of the publicity helped expand the group's cult following to the point
where their next album, the 1999 concept record The Amazing Jeckel Brothers,
debuted in the Top Five. As evidenced by the numerous different collectible
covers for The Amazing Jeckel Brothers, ICP had become a virtual
merchandising machine, complete with comic books to flesh out their
elaborate "Dark Carnival" mythology; they also wrote and starred in their
own straight-to-video movie, Big Money Hustlas, and made guest appearances
at wrestling events. The group spent the summer of 1999 bickering with
various tourmates (Coal Chamber in particular), and played at the ill-fated
Woodstock '99. Early in 2000, Shaggy collapsed on-stage, but the cause was
deemed to be nothing more than a combination of the flu and low blood sugar;
however, while staging a wrestling event several months later, Shaggy fell
off of a steel cage, breaking his nose and cheekbone. Still, ICP managed to
make it into the studio to record a follow-up album, and Big Money Hustlas
was finally released that summer. On Halloween 2000, the group issued their
sixth album, which apparently did not count (as all the other albums had) as
a "joker card" (in the ICP fantasy world, the sixth joker card was supposed
to signal the apocalypse). Similar to Guns N' Roses' Use Your Illusion, the
album was released in two completely different, separate versions, titled
Bizzar and Bizaar. Finally needing to live up to the years of hype, 2002's
The Wraith: Shangri-La revealed that the hidden message of their music was
always to follow God and make it to heaven. Considering the murder fantasies
of "Beverly Kills 50187" and the necrophilic overtones of "Cemetary Girl,"
this may have been a shock to long-time fans. In August 2004 the band
released the sixth and final joker card, Hell's Pit, in two separate
editions. Both had the same CD but were packed with differnt DVDs. But the
Dark Carnival wasn't fully shuttered. Spring 2005 found ICP hyping a new
direction for the mythology, to be revealed with the May release of Calm.
The EP also prepped Insane Clown Posse's devoted fan base for the sixth
annual Gathering of the Juggalos that July. |
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INSANE CLOWN POSSE PICTURES |
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MOST POPULAR
Angelina Jolie
Jessica Alba
Paris Hilton
Scarlett Johansson
Jessica Simpson
Britney Spears
Christina Aguilera
Lindsay Lohan
Shakira
Beyonce
Hilary Duff
ADDITIONS
Miley Cyrus
Rihanna
Hayden Panettiere
Miranda Cosgrove
Selena Gomez
Demi Lovato
Vanessa Hudgens
Ashley Tisdale
Jonas Brothers
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