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Released before the name-change to the Bloodhound Gang. The music on this album is synth-pop which has no connection, lyrically or otherwise, to the modern sound of the Gang. Just Another Demo: Released: 1993; Label: none (self-released) Formats: Cassette; The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack to Hitler's Handicapped Helpers: Released: April 1 ...
The Bloodhound Gang is an American rock band from Quakertown, Pennsylvania. [2] Formed in 1992 by rappers Jimmy Pop and Michael "Daddy Long Legs" Bowe (now in Wolfpac ), the band is known for its crude lyrics that are full of sexual innuendos. [ 3 ]
Show Us Your Hits is a greatest hits compilation album released by American rock band Bloodhound Gang on December 21, 2010. The double entendre in the title is typical of the band's style. The double entendre in the title is typical of the band's style.
This is a set category. It should only contain pages that are Bloodhound Gang albums or lists of Bloodhound Gang albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Bloodhound Gang albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories
One Fierce Beer Coaster is the second studio album by American band Bloodhound Gang, released on December 3, 1996.Produced by Jimmy Pop, it was the band's first release on Geffen Records, and the first to feature "Evil" Jared Hasselhoff on bass guitar, and DJ Q-Ball on the turntables.
Hefty Fine is the fourth studio album by American alternative rock band Bloodhound Gang, released on September 27, 2005.Produced by band frontman Jimmy Pop, it was Bloodhound Gang's third release on Geffen Records following the band's smash hit Hooray for Boobies which managed to sell over one million copies in the United States and Europe.
Hard-Off is the fifth studio album by American alternative rock band Bloodhound Gang, released on December 18, 2015. [1] It marks the band's first full-length studio release since 2005's Hefty Fine.
On August 7, 2015, OC Weekly published a 20-year anniversary write-up of the album, stating "what makes Use Your Fingers worthy of re-examining two decades later is how much this album not only shouldn't exist from a legal perspective, but how it managed to predict so much of the 20 years of musical trends that followed it," and praising it as ...