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The Wraith: Hell's Pit is the ninth studio album by the American hip hop duo Insane Clown Posse.It was released on August 31, 2004, via Psychopathic Records as a follow-up to 2002 The Wraith: Shangri-La and the second half of the sixth and final Joker Card in the first Deck of the Dark Carnival mythology.
The discography of Insane Clown Posse, an American hip hop duo from Delray, Detroit, composed of Joseph Bruce and Joseph Utsler, who perform under the respective personas of the wicked clowns Violent J and Shaggy 2 Dope, consists of 16 studio albums, 84 singles, 22 extended plays, 19 compilations and 3 box sets.
The eponymous Riddle Box is a jack-in-the-box that decides whether one's soul is sent to Shangri-La or Hell's Pit in the afterlife. The album's themes revolve around death and judgement, and reveal that the fate determined by the Riddle Box can be found by looking deep within yourself, and can be changed with righteous actions.
The Dark Carnival concept was introduced with Joker Cards Deck 1, but not named, on Insane Clown Posse's first album Carnival of Carnage (1992), and was developed in subsequent releases Ringmaster (1994), Riddle Box (1995), The Great Milenko (1997), The Amazing Jeckel Brothers (1999), The Wraith: Shangri-La (2002), and The Wraith: Hell's Pit ...
The Wraith: Remix Albums is a remix album by American hip hop duo Insane Clown Posse. Released in 2006, the album contains remixes of tracks from the group's albums The Wraith: Shangri-La (2002) and Hell's Pit (2004). The album opened at #158 on the Billboard 200, [1] and peaked at #9 on the Top Independent Albums chart. [2]
The album is the first of two albums representing the sixth Joker's Card in the group's Dark Carnival mythology. The album's lyrics describe the titular Wraith's exhibition of heaven. The album was the first Insane Clown Posse album that producer Mike E. Clark did not contribute to.
The song is a cover of Eazy-E's song of the same name from his album Eazy-Duz-It. "Intro" was originally intended to be the intro for Tunnel of Love. [2] "Dear ICP" was recorded in 1993 and was supposed to be released on The Ringmaster. [2] The songs "Feels So Right" and "Bodies Fly" were intended for Hell's Pit. [2] "Panties" was originally ...
Then known as Inner City Posse, the group released the label's first album, Dog Beats, that year. [2] Since its foundation, the label has featured 23 artists and bands from the United States, predominantly around Detroit, Michigan. Two now defunct subsidiary labels, Ax & Smash Records and Urban Music Zone, were created under Psychopathic Records.