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Sloppy Seconds was the second album from the country rock band Dr. Hook & the Medicine Show. It featured some of their most popular songs, including " Freakin' at the Freakers Ball " and " The Cover of Rolling Stone ."
Live: No Time for Tuning is the first live album by Sloppy Seconds. It was released in 1996 on Triple X Records, and was recorded at The Emerson Theater in their hometown Indianapolis , Indiana . [ 1 ]
Destroyed is the first full-length studio album by punk band Sloppy Seconds.It was released by Toxic Shock Records, on LP and cassette, and co-released on CD by the Musical Tragedies label in Germany, both in 1989.
Sloppy Seconds is an American, Ramones-influenced punk band sometimes referred to as a junk rock band from Indianapolis, Indiana, that started in 1984.They gained notoriety in the underground punk scene with gritty and controversial [citation needed] songs like "Come Back, Traci," "I Don't Want to be a Homosexual", "Janie is a Nazi", "I Want 'em Dead" and "So Fucked Up."
The First Seven Inches is the first EP released by punk band Sloppy Seconds. It was released in 1987 on the band's own Alternative Testicles label. In 1992, it was reissued on Taang! Records under the title The First Seven Inches...And Then Some! along with 10 bonus tracks of various b-sides and outtakes from the band's first two albums and prior.
It should only contain pages that are Sloppy Seconds albums or lists of Sloppy Seconds albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Sloppy Seconds albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
A Philadelphia sports fan, who went on a misogynistic tirade against a female Green Bay Packers fan in viral video, lost his job and won't be allowed to ever attend another Eagles home game ...
The title track was covered by Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show on an album titled Sloppy Seconds. The tracks "Sarah Cynthia Sylvia Stout Would Not Take the Garbage Out" and "The Peace Proposal" would later be released as poems in Silverstein's collection Where the Sidewalk Ends, with "The Peace Proposal" being retitled "The Generals".