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Jugganauts: The Best Of Insane Clown Posse is the ninth compilation album by American hip hop group. All tracks are digitally remastered by Gavin Lurssen. Name: The name, Insane Clown Posse, is absolutely outrageous. No, I do not say that in a good way either. (from now on, I will say icp) Who would want to be known as a duo of insane clowns anyway? Honestly, the way I see it, it started out as a few teenagers who wanted to start a rap duo. From that, I can see how the name started. An unlikely institution, this Michigan horrorcore rap duo grew a devoted following that became a subculture unto itself. Read Full Biography. Artist Information.
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Part rap group, part societal phenomenon, Insane Clown Posse grew an unlikely cult around their cartoonish and critically loathed horrorcore rap styles. Loosely connected themes of psychopathic clowns, Faygo soda, and the importance of friendship was enough for thousands of die-hard fans to don clown make up and proclaim themselves 'juggalos,' part of a community of Insane Clown Posse superfans drawn to their lowest-common-denominator humor and shock-factor rhymes. Staunchly independent, ICP only had brief and controversy-heavy associations with major labels around the time of their 1997 album The Great Milenko, but spent much of their decades of existence releasing their albums (as well as the music of an extended family of artists) on their own Psychopathic Records label. The group's grassroots approach resulted in millions of album sales, with a creative and commercial peak happening around the time of their highly conceptual late-'90s/early-2000s output. A loose narrative exposed over the course of several albums -- records like 1995's Riddle Box and 1999's The Amazing Jeckel Brothers -- was presented as different 'joker's cards,' culminating with the spiritual reveal of 2002's The Wraith; Shangri-La.
Down to a duo, ICP were originally formed in 1989 as a hardcore Detroit rap group called Inner City Posse. After combusting in 1991, the only members left, Violent J (born Joseph Bruce) and Shaggy 2 Dope (born Joseph Utsler), slightly altered their name to reflect the fact that they had been visited by the Carnival Spirit, who 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 community 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 a million dollars while ICP recorded their new album, The Great Milenko. On the day of its 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 ICP's notoriety, which continued to increase 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 its 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 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.
In the 2000, the first Gathering of the Juggalos festival took place in Novi, Michigan. Organized by ICP, the two-day show included live wrestling and performances by ICP, Twiztid, Blaze Ya Dead Homie, and other Psychopathic Records performers. Thousands of juggalos flocked to the event even at its beginnings, and it would grow to become an annual summit for fans of the band and participants in the strange subculture that was the juggalo. By 2009, attendance at the gatherings was in the tens of thousands.
On Halloween 2000, the group issued its 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 necrophiliac overtones of 'Cemetery Girl,' this may have been a shock to longtime 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 different DVDs. Nevertheless, 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. Their 2007 effort, The Tempest, found the duo reuniting with producer Mike E. Clark, the man behind the first four joker card releases. Clark stuck around for their 2009 Bang! Pow! Boom! album. That same year, the duo presented a second feature-length film. This time exploring a western motif, Big Money Rustlas featured the clowns in gunslinger garb and was again released outside of theaters.
Featuring Freshness, a two-disc collection of the group's work with other artists, arrived in 2011. A year later, the conceptual The Mighty Death Pop focused on their detractors and other 'certified hoes,' with Clark returning as producer. In 2015, The Marvelous Missing Link (Lost) landed as the first of that year's two albums, while The Marvelous Missing Link (Found) landed later in the year. In 2017, while recording the next joker card, the duo released a pair of solo albums, with Shaggy 2 Dope's F.T.F.O.M.F. arriving months before Violent J's American Life/Lives. In mid-2018, the group announced that their 15th studio album, Fearless Fred Fury, would be released in October of that year, but it was ultimately pushed back until February 2019. An eight-song EP, Flip the Rat, was scheduled for release on the same day. ~ John Bush
Down to a duo, ICP were originally formed in 1989 as a hardcore Detroit rap group called Inner City Posse. After combusting in 1991, the only members left, Violent J (born Joseph Bruce) and Shaggy 2 Dope (born Joseph Utsler), slightly altered their name to reflect the fact that they had been visited by the Carnival Spirit, who 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 community 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 a million dollars while ICP recorded their new album, The Great Milenko. On the day of its 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 ICP's notoriety, which continued to increase 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 its 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 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.
In the 2000, the first Gathering of the Juggalos festival took place in Novi, Michigan. Organized by ICP, the two-day show included live wrestling and performances by ICP, Twiztid, Blaze Ya Dead Homie, and other Psychopathic Records performers. Thousands of juggalos flocked to the event even at its beginnings, and it would grow to become an annual summit for fans of the band and participants in the strange subculture that was the juggalo. By 2009, attendance at the gatherings was in the tens of thousands.
On Halloween 2000, the group issued its 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 necrophiliac overtones of 'Cemetery Girl,' this may have been a shock to longtime 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 different DVDs. Nevertheless, 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. Their 2007 effort, The Tempest, found the duo reuniting with producer Mike E. Clark, the man behind the first four joker card releases. Clark stuck around for their 2009 Bang! Pow! Boom! album. That same year, the duo presented a second feature-length film. This time exploring a western motif, Big Money Rustlas featured the clowns in gunslinger garb and was again released outside of theaters.
Featuring Freshness, a two-disc collection of the group's work with other artists, arrived in 2011. A year later, the conceptual The Mighty Death Pop focused on their detractors and other 'certified hoes,' with Clark returning as producer. In 2015, The Marvelous Missing Link (Lost) landed as the first of that year's two albums, while The Marvelous Missing Link (Found) landed later in the year. In 2017, while recording the next joker card, the duo released a pair of solo albums, with Shaggy 2 Dope's F.T.F.O.M.F. arriving months before Violent J's American Life/Lives. In mid-2018, the group announced that their 15th studio album, Fearless Fred Fury, would be released in October of that year, but it was ultimately pushed back until February 2019. An eight-song EP, Flip the Rat, was scheduled for release on the same day. ~ John Bush
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Insane Clown Posse discography | |
---|---|
Studio albums | 15 |
Compilation albums | 17 |
Music videos | 43 |
EPs | 9 |
Singles | 53 |
B-sides | 2 |
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 seventeen studio albums, fifty three singles, nine extended plays and seventeen compilations. Music videos and collaborations are also included, as are film and television appearances and home video releases.
Originally known as Inner City Posse, the group introduced supernatural- and horror-themed lyrics as a means of distinguishing itself stylistically. Insane Clown Posse founded the independent record labelPsychopathic Records with Alex Abbiss as manager, and produced and starred in the feature films Big Money Hustlas and Big Money Rustlas. They have collaborated with many famous hip hop and rock musicians. They have earned three gold albums and two platinum albums.
They have been in the supergroups: Golden Goldies (1995), Dark Lotus (1998–2018), Psychopathic Rydas (1999–2018), Soopa Villainz (2002–2005), The Bloody Brothers (2005; 2018–present), The Killjoy Club (2013–2016; 2018) and The Loony Goons (2018–present)
- 1Albums
- 2Singles
- 6Music videos
![All icp albums All icp albums](/uploads/1/2/4/3/124380900/802562514.jpg)
Albums[edit]
Studio albums[edit]
Year | Album details | Peak chart positions | RIAA certification (sales thresholds)[1] | Sales | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
US [2] | US Indie [3] | US Rap [4] | US Heat [5] | AUS [6] | UK [7] | ||||
1992 | Carnival of Carnage
| -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| |
1994 | Ringmaster
| -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| |
1995 | Riddle Box
| -- | -- | -- | 16 | -- | -- |
| |
1997 | The Great Milenko
| 63 | -- | -- | -- | -- | 169 |
|
|
1999 | The Amazing Jeckel Brothers
| 4 | -- | -- | -- | -- | 99 |
| |
2000 | Bizaar
| 20 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| |
Bizzar
| 21 | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| ||
2002 | The Wraith: Shangri-La
| 15 | 1 | -- | -- | 71 | -- |
| |
2004 | The Wraith: Hell's Pit
| 12 | 1 | -- | -- | 49 | 184 |
| |
2007 | The Tempest
| 20 | 2 | 8 | -- | -- | -- | ||
2009 | Bang! Pow! Boom!
| 4 | 1 | 3 | -- | -- | -- |
| |
2012 | The Mighty Death Pop!A[›]
| 4 | 1 | 3 | -- | -- | -- |
| |
2015 | The Marvelous Missing Link: Lost
| 17 | 2 | 2 | -- | -- | -- | ||
The Marvelous Missing Link: Found
| 136 | 9 | 9 | -- | -- | -- | |||
2019 | Fearless Fred Fury
| 44 | 2 | 24 | -- | -- | -- |
Compilations[edit]
Year | Album details | Peak chart positions | RIAA certification (sales thresholds) | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
US [2] | US Indie [13] | US Rap [13] | ||||||||||||
1995 | Forgotten Freshness
| -- | -- | -- | ||||||||||
1997 | Mutilation Mix
| -- | -- | -- | ||||||||||
1998 | Forgotten Freshness Volumes 1 & 2
| 46 | -- | -- |
| |||||||||
2001 | Forgotten Freshness Volume 3
| -- | 10 | -- | ||||||||||
2002 | The Pendulum
| 88 | -- | -- | ||||||||||
2005 | Forgotten Freshness Volume 4
| 88 | 4 | 20 | ||||||||||
2006 | The Wraith: Remix Albums
| 158 | 9 | 23 | ||||||||||
2007 | Jugganauts: The Best of Insane Clown Posse
| 124 | -- | 23 | ||||||||||
2010 | The Old Shit
| -- | -- | -- | ||||||||||
2011 | Featuring Freshness
| 193 | 30 | 14 | ||||||||||
2013 | Forgotten Freshness Volume 5
| -- | 41 | 13 | ||||||||||
2014 | 20th Anniversary Hallowicked
| -- | -- | -- | ||||||||||
2015 | The Marvelous Missing Link: Outtakes
| -- | -- | -- | ||||||||||
20th Anniversary: Riddle Box
| -- | -- | -- | |||||||||||
2017 | Incredible Collectable Collection
| -- | -- | -- | ||||||||||
20th Anniversary: The Great Milenko
| -- | -- | -- | |||||||||||
'—' denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that territory. |
Collaboration albums[edit]
Title | Album details | Peak chart positions | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
US [2] | US Indie [13] | US Rap [13] | US R&B [13] | ||
GOTJ 2005 (with ABK, Twiztid, Blaze) |
| -- | -- | -- | -- |
American Psycho (with Twiztid) |
| -- | -- | -- | -- |
Reindeer Games (as The Killjoy Club with Da Mafia 6ix) |
| 133 | 24 | 12 | 20 |
Extended plays[edit]
Year | Album details | Peak chart positions | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
US [2] | US Indie [13] | US Rap [13] | ||
1990 | Enter the Ghetto Zone
| -- | -- | -- |
1990 | Ghetto Territory
| -- | -- | -- |
1990 | Intelligence and Violence
| -- | -- | -- |
1991 | Bass-ment Cuts
| -- | -- | -- |
1991 | Dog Beats
| -- | -- | -- |
1993 | Beverly Kills 50187
| -- | -- | -- |
1994 | The Terror Wheel
| -- | -- | -- |
1994 | A Carnival Christmas
| -- | -- | -- |
1996 | Tunnel of Love
| -- | -- | -- |
2000 | Dark Carnival Action Figures
| -- | -- | -- |
2005 | The Calm
| 32 | 1 | 5 |
2007 | Eye of the Storm
| -- | -- | -- |
2014 | House of Wax
| -- | -- | -- |
2015 | Phantom X-tra Spooky Edition
| -- | -- | -- |
2018 | Hell's Cellar
| -- | -- | -- |
2019 | Flip The Rat EP
| -- | -- | -- |
Box sets[edit]
Year | Album details | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2014 | The First Six
| ||||||||
'—' denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that territory. |
Solo albums[edit]
![Download Download](/uploads/1/2/4/3/124380900/238681017.jpg)
Year | Artist | Album details | Peak chart positions | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
US [2] | US Indie [13] | US Rap [13] | ||||||||||
1994 | Shaggy 2 Dope | Fuck Off! EP
| -- | 42 | -- | |||||||
2003 | Violent J | Wizard of the Hood EP
| 89 | 3 | -- | |||||||
2006 | Shaggy 2 Dope | F.T.F.O.
| 88 | 7 | -- | |||||||
2009 | Violent J | The Shining
| 48 | 5 | 14 | |||||||
2017 | Shaggy 2 Dope | F.T.F.O.M.F.
| 72 | 1 | -- | |||||||
2018 | Violent J | Karma Forest
| -- | -- | -- | |||||||
'—' denotes releases that did not chart or were not released in that territory. |
Group albums[edit]
Year | Album | Peak chart positions | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Group | US [2] | US Indie [13] | US Rap [13] | US Heat [13] | Label | ||
July 17, 2001 | Dark Lotus | Tales from the Lotus Pod | 158 | 6 | -- | 1 | Psychopathic Records |
April 6, 2004 | Black Rain | 71 | 3 | -- | -- | ||
August 11, 2005 | Soopa Villainz | Furious | 92 | 9 | -- | -- | |
April 15, 2008 | Dark Lotus | The Opaque Brotherhood | 45 | 4 | 7 | -- | |
July 29, 2014 | The Mud, Water, Air & Blood | 43 | 4 | 4 | -- | ||
September 2, 2014 | The Killjoy Club | Reindeer Games | 133 | 24 | 12 | -- | |
July 5, 2019 | The Loony Goons | The Goons | -- | -- | -- | -- |
Label compilation albums[edit]
Year | Group | Album | Label |
---|---|---|---|
2000 | Various | Psychopathics from Outer Space | Psychopathic Records/Joe & Joey Records |
2003 | Psychopathics from Outer Space 2 | ||
2007 | Psychopathics from Outer Space 3 | ||
2019 | Psychopathics from Outer Space 4 | Psychopathic Records |
Singles[edit]
As lead artist[edit]
Year | Single | Peak chart positions | Album | |
---|---|---|---|---|
US [2] | UK [14] | |||
1989 | 'Party at the Top of the Hill' (as JJ Boys) | -- | -- | non-album single |
1994 | 'Psychopathic' | -- | -- | Carnival of Carnage |
'Chicken Huntin' | -- | -- | Ringmaster | |
1995 | 'Chicken Huntin' (Slaughter House Remix)' | -- | -- | Riddle Box |
'Fat Sweaty Betty' | -- | -- | Forgotten Freshness | |
'The Joker's Wild' | -- | -- | Riddle Box | |
1997 | 'Halls of Illusions' | -- | 56 | The Great Milenko |
1998 | 'Hokus Pokus (Headhunta'z Remix)' | -- | 53 | Forgotten Freshness Volumes 1 & 2 |
'Santa's a Fat Bitch' | 67 | -- | ||
'How Many Times?' | -- | -- | The Great Milenko | |
1999 | 'The Dirt Ball' (with Twiztid) | -- | -- | Heavy Metal 2000 Soundtrack |
'Another Love Song' | -- | -- | The Amazing Jeckel Brothers | |
'Fuck the World' | -- | -- | ||
'Mad Professor' | 118 | -- | ||
'Terrible' | -- | -- | ||
2000 | 'Jacob's Word' | -- | -- | Dark Carnival Action Figures EP |
'Let's Go All the Way' | -- | -- | Bizzar | |
'Tilt-A-Whirl' | -- | -- | Bizaar | |
2002 | 'Homies' (with Twiztid) | -- | -- | The Wraith: Shangri-La |
'Hell's Forecast'/'Murder Rap' | -- | -- | ||
2004 | 'Bowling Balls' | -- | -- | The Wraith: Hell's Pit |
2005 | 'The People' | -- | -- | Forgotten Freshness Volume 4 |
2007 | 'I Do This!' | -- | -- | The Tempest |
'The Tower' | -- | -- | ||
2009 | 'The Bone' | -- | -- | Bang! Pow! Boom! |
'In Yo Face' | -- | -- | ||
2010 | 'Miracles' | -- | -- | |
'Juggalo Island' | -- | -- | ||
'Fonz Pond' | -- | -- | ||
2011 | 'It's All Over' | -- | -- | |
'Leck Mich Im Arsch' b/w 'Mountain Girl' | -- | -- | Music: W.A.Mozart / Music: Jack White III | |
2012 | 'Chris Benoit' | -- | -- | The Mighty Death Pop! |
'Night of the Chainsaw' | -- | -- | ||
2013 | 'Jump Around' | -- | -- | Smothered, Covered & Chunked |
'Hate Her to Death' | -- | -- | The Mighty Death Pop! | |
'Where's God?' | -- | -- | ||
'When I'm Clownin' (Danny Brown Remix)' (with Boondox & Danny Brown) | -- | -- | ||
2014 | 'Forever' | -- | -- | The Mighty Death Pop! |
2015 | 'Vomit' | -- | -- | The Marvelous Missing Link: Lost |
'Explosions' | -- | -- | ||
'Juggalo Party' | -- | -- | The Marvelous Missing Link: Found | |
2016 | 'Falling Apart' | -- | -- | The Marvelous Missing Link: Lost |
'I See the Devil' | -- | -- | ||
2017 | 'Beautiful (Indestructible)' | -- | -- | Covered, Smothered & Chunked |
'4 Life' | -- | -- | non-album singles | |
'6 Foot 7 Foot' (with Lyte) | -- | -- | ||
'Fuck My Dad (Richard Bruce)' (with Lyte, Jumpsteady & Shaggy 2 Dope) | -- | -- | ||
'Black Blizzard' | -- | -- | 20th Anniversary: The Great Milenko | |
2018 | 'Cusswords' | -- | -- | Hurricane of Diamonds |
'Hair Up' | -- | -- | ||
'Bleep' | -- | -- | ||
'W.T.F.!' | -- | -- | Fearless Fred Fury | |
2019 | 'Fury' | -- | -- | |
'—' denotes singles that did not chart. |
Hallowicked singles[edit]
Year | Single |
---|---|
1994 | Dead Pumpkins |
1995 | Mr. Rotten Treats |
1996 | Witches and Warlocks: |
1997 | Mr. Johnson's Head Remix |
1998 | Pumpkin Carver: |
1999 | Sleep Walker |
2000 | Hallowicked 2000: |
2001 | Hallowicked 2001: |
2002 | Hallowicked 2002: |
2003 | Thug Pit |
2004 | Murda Cloak |
2005 | Wicked Hellaween |
2006 | Blood Redrum: |
2007 | Evil Is Afraid |
2008 | I'm Your Killer |
2009 | If I Ate Your Brains |
2010 | Hallowicked 2010: |
2011 | I Saw A Monster |
2012 | Amber Alert |
2013 | Hallowicked 2013: |
2014 | Red Moon Howl |
2015 | Haunted By The Devil |
2016 | Who U Know? |
2017 | Bloody Screams of 17:
|
Guest appearances[edit]
Year | Artist(s) | Album | Song |
---|---|---|---|
1995 | Cykosis | Cykodelichell Bold | Bloodstains |
Project Born | Born Dead | Graveyard | |
1996 | Coup Detroit | Coup Detroit | Get Yo Ass Off The Couch |
Humble Gods | No Heroes | Running Out of Time | |
1997 | Twiztid | Mostasteless | Meat Cleaver |
1998 | Myzery | Para La Isla | Witching Hour |
1999 | Twiztid | Mostasteless | Spin the Bottle |
Hound Dogs | |||
2000 | Blaze Ya Dead Homie | Blaze Ya Dead Homie | Shittalkaz |
Kottonmouth Kings | High Society | Wickit Klowns | |
Three 6 Mafia | When the Smoke Clears: Sixty 6, Sixty 1 | Just Anotha Crazy Click | |
Twiztid | Cryptic Collection | Meat Cleaver | |
Freek Show | All I Ever Wanted | ||
Wut tha Dead Like | |||
Maniac Killa | |||
2001 | Blaze Ya Dead Homie | 1 Less G n da Hood | Given Half the Chance |
Hatchet Execution | |||
Twiztid | Cryptic Collection Vol. 2 | I Don't Care | |
Drunken Ninja Master | |||
Vanilla Ice | Bi-Polar | Insane Killas | |
2002 | Anybody Killa | Hatchet Warrior | Sticky Icky Situation |
Now You Know | |||
Gang Related | |||
Esham | Acid Rain | Narration 1-3 | |
Panic Attack | |||
Everyone | |||
Migraine Headache | |||
La La La | |||
P-P-P-Pow! | |||
How Do I Plead to Homicide | |||
Redemption | |||
Ol' Dirty Bastard | The Trials and Tribulations of Russell Jones | Dirty & Stinkin | |
Dirty & Stinkin (Remix) | |||
Jumpsteady | The Chaos Theory | Ninjas In Action | |
2003 | Twiztid | The Green Book | Call Me |
I'm the Only 1 | |||
Marsh Lagoon | |||
Zug Izland | Cracked Tiles | Fire | |
Prison Song | |||
Fly | |||
Small Town | |||
Always | |||
Hiroshima | |||
Esham | Repentance | Hard Times | |
Boom | |||
2004 | Blaze Ya Dead Homie | Colton Grundy: The Undying | Climbing |
Fresh Kid Ice | Freaky Chinese | Swingin Hatchets | |
Tour Bus | |||
2005 | Twiztid | Man's Myth | Bonus Flavor |
Mutant (Vol. 2) | Manikin | ||
2006 | Axe Murder Boyz | Blood In, Blood Out | Calm Down |
Heatseeker | |||
Boondox | Krimson Creek | Lady In The Jaguar | |
2007 | Twiztid | Independents Day | Monster's Ball |
Kottonmouth Kings | Cloud Nine | Think 4 Yourself | |
2008 | Anybody Killa | Mudface | You Ain't No Killa |
Boondox | The Harvest | Walking After Midnight | |
DJ Clay | Let 'Em Bleed: The Mixxtape, Vol. 1 | 'Alley Rat [Remix]' | |
'Frankenstein' | |||
'Fall Apart' | |||
'Get Ya Wicked On [Remix]' | |||
'Global Warming' | |||
Let 'Em Bleed: The Mixxtape, Vol. 2 | 'Rollin' Over [Rock Mix]' | ||
Let 'Em Bleed: The Mixxtape, Vol. 3 | 'They Shootin (Rock Mix)' | ||
'Rare Never Heard Before Milenko Skit' | |||
'Duke Of Tha Wicked' | |||
'Can't Hold Me Back '08' | |||
'Can't Fuck Wit Us | |||
'Kept Grindin' | |||
Project Born | Born Dead 2 | Fuck With Me | |
Prozak | Tales From The Sick | Insane | |
2009 | Mike E. Clark | Psychopathic Murder Mix Volume 1 | 'Whoz Goin Next (Triple X Mash Up)' |
'Chickin 'Pluckin' Huntin Remix' | |||
'Rock The Dead Body Man' | |||
'Neck Cutter' | |||
'How Long Will You Juggalos Be Down' | |||
'Willabe Rags Argues With Violent J' | |||
'Southwest Mash Up' | |||
DJ Clay | Let 'Em Bleed: The Mixxtape, Vol. 4 | 'I Shot A Hater' | |
'Hi-Rize (Remix)' | |||
Twiztid | Twiztid Presents: Cryptic Collection Holiday Edition | 'Murder City Christmas' | |
2010 | Kottonmouth Kings | Long Live the Kings | Fuck the Police |
Boondox | South of Hell | Watch Your Back | |
Chop Shop | Welcome To The Chop Shop | We Get It | |
Anybody Killa | Medicine Bag | Kept It Wicked | |
2011 | Vanilla Ice | WTF | Born on Halloween |
Jack White | Non-Album Single | Leck Mich Im Arsch | |
Mountain Girl | |||
The Dayton Family | Charges of Indictment | The Gathering | |
2012 | DJ Paul | For I've Sinned: Hosted By DJ Scream & DJ Black | Go and Kill |
Twiztid | Abominationz | Abominationz | |
2013 | Big Hoodoo | Crystal Skull | Spells |
Myzery | Demon/Angel | Knockin On Heaven's Door | |
2014 | Axe Murder Boyz | The Garcia Brothers | Might Go Mad |
Boondox | Abbadon | Kikdoe | |
My Night | |||
2015 | Kottonmouth Kings | Krown Power | Fuck Off |
DJ Paul | Master Of Evil | F U 2 (w/ Yelawolf) | |
2016 | Twiztid | Mutant: Remixed and Remastered | Manikin |
Big Hoodoo | Asylum | Monster Squad (w/Anybody Killa, Axe Murder Boyz & DJ Paul) | |
JellyRoll & Lil Wyte | No Filter 2 | Zombie (w/Madchild) | |
2017 | Twiztid | Cryptic Collection: Valentine's Day Edition | She Ain't Afraid |
Fisty Cuffs | After School Special | ||
Lyte | Psychopathic Monstar EP | FTTBBR | |
Bukshot | Weirdo | Run w/(Madchild) | |
Myzery | Demon/Angel | Let Me Go | |
2018 | Ouija Macc | GutterWater | Diamonds |
Myzery | 20th Anniversary: Para la Isla | Da Way We Live (w/Nitemare) | |
Witching Hour | |||
The Demon Angel | Let Me Go | ||
Knocking On Heavens Door |
Original contributions to compilations[edit]
Year | Tracks | Album | Other contributing artists | Performed As | Members Of ICP |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1998 | 'Oddities' | WWF The Music, Vol. 3 | Insane Clown Posse | ||
1999 | 'Take It' | WCW Mayhem: The Music' | |||
2000 | 'The Dirt Ball' | Psychopathics from Outer Space | Twiztid | ||
'$50 Bucks' | |||||
'Sleep Walker' | Violent J | ||||
R-U-A Ryda? | Twiztid, Blaze Ya Dead Homie & Myzery | Psychopathic Rydas | Insane Clown Posse | ||
'Slim Anus' | Jamie Madrox | Insane Clown Posse | |||
'Dead End' | Ice-T | ||||
'Red Neck Hoe '99' | Twiztid | ||||
'The Amazing Maze' | Violent J | ||||
Who? | Twiztid, Blaze Ya Dead Homie & Myzery | Psychopathic Rydas | Insane Clown Posse | ||
'Meat Cleaver' | Twiztid & Myzery | ||||
'Posse on Broadway' | Take a Bite Outta Rhyme: A Rock Tribute to Rap | Violent J | |||
2003 | Conquer | Psychopathics from Outer Space 2 | Esham & Anybody Killa | ||
'Out There' | Bushwick Bill | Insane Clown Posse | |||
'Demon Faces' | Twiztid, Esham & Anybody Killa | ||||
Some Fuckin' How | Violent J | ||||
24's On An 84 | Esham & T-N-T | Shaggy 2 Dope | |||
Mr. Sesame Seed | Anybody Killa | Violent J | |||
Do It! | Shaggy 2 Dope | ||||
'Wicked Wild' | 2 Live Crew & Esham | Insane Clown Posse | |||
'Under the Big Top' | |||||
Graverobbers | Twiztid, Blaze Ya Dead Homie & Anybody Killa | Dark Lotus | |||
Free Studio | Twiztid, Blaze Ya Dead Homie, Anybody Killa, Esham | ||||
2006 | 'Like It Like That' | Evil Bong (soundtrack) | |||
2007 | 'Further Away' | Psychopathics from Outer Space 3 | Twiztid & Blaze Ya Dead Homie | Dark Lotus | |
'Truth Dare' | |||||
'Put It Down' | Blaze Ya Dead Homie & Jamie Madrox | Violent J | |||
'Last Day Alive' | Boondox & Monoxide Child | Shaggy 2 Dope | |||
'If I Was God' | Violent J | ||||
'Hatchet Man' | Twiztid, Blaze Ya Dead Homie | Insane Clown Posse | |||
2008 | Frankenstein | Let 'Em Bleed: The Mixxtape, Vol. 1 | Violent J | ||
Fall Apart (Remix) | Shaggy 2 Dope | ||||
Global Warming | Violent J | ||||
'Global Warming' | The Butcher Shop | Insane Clown Posse | |||
Knee Crackaz | Let 'Em Bleed: The Mixxtape, Vol. 2 | Shaggy 2 Dope | |||
In Love With A Hooker | Esham | Violent J | |||
Filthy | Shaggy 2 Dope | ||||
4Ever Detroit | Blaze Ya Dead Homie & Awesome Dre | Violent J | |||
Dead Man Walking | |||||
Duke Of The Wicked | Let 'Em Bleed: The Mixxtape, Vol. 3 | ||||
Can't Hold Me Back '08 | Esham, Big Herk, Awesome Dre & Merciless Amir | Shaggy 2 Dope | |||
Can't Fuck With Us | |||||
Kept Grindin' | Twiztid, Blaze Ya Dead Homie, Anybody Killa, Axe Murder Boyz, Boondox & DJ Clay | Insane Clown Posse | |||
2009 | I Shot A Hater | Let 'Em Bleed: The Mixxtape, Vol. 4 | Twiztid & Three 6 Mafia | ||
2010 | The Opener | Book of the Wicked, Chapter One | Violent J | ||
Soopa Ninja | |||||
Whoop! | Axe Murder Boyz & DJ Clay | Insane Clown Posse | |||
I Live My Life On Stage | Shaggy 2 Dope | ||||
Down With The Wicked Shit | Book of the Wicked, Chapter Two | Blaze Ya Dead Homie | |||
Fuck The Radio | Bonez Dubb | Violent J | |||
Hey Hoe | Otis | ||||
Who Is It? | Insane Clown Posse | ||||
2013 | Goblin | A World Upside Down: The Mixxtape | |||
When I'm Clownin' (CeeMix) | Kreayshawn | ||||
Officer Hatchet | Violent J | ||||
SKREEEM! (Joe Strange Remix) | Hopsin & Tech N9ne | Insane Clown Posse |
Videography[edit]
- ICP's Strangle-Mania (1995)
- Shockumentary (1997)[15]
- ECW Hardcore Heaven (1997)
- WWF Summerslam (1998)[15]
- Backstage Sluts (1999)[15]
- Strangle Mania 2 (1999)[15]
- WCW Road Wild (1999)[15]
- WCW Fall Brawl (1999)
- Born Twiztid: Beyond the Freakshow (2000)[15]
- JCW, Volume 1 (2000)[15]
- JCW, Volume 2 (2001)[15]
- XPW Redemption (2001)[15]
- JCW, Volume 3 (2003)[15]
- Bootlegged in L.A. (2003)
- Psychopathic: The Videos (2007)
- JCW: SlamTV - Episodes 1 thru 9 (2007)
- JCW: SlamTV - Episodes 10 thru 15 featuring Bloodymania (2007)
- Psychopathic: The Videos Volume 2 (2014)
Music videos[edit]
As lead artist[edit]
Year | Title | Director(s) | Album | Artist | Role |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1994 | Chicken Huntin' | Ringmaster | Insane Clown Posse | Main Performers | |
1995 | Chicken Huntin' (Slaughter House Mix) | Paris Mayhew | Riddle Box | ||
1997 | Halls of Illusions | Kevin Kerslake | The Great Milenko | ||
1998 | Hokus Pokus | Steven Hanft | |||
How Many Times | |||||
Piggie Pie | |||||
1999 | Another Love Song | The Amazing Jeckel Brothers | |||
2000 | |||||
Let's Go All the Way | Bizzar | ||||
Tilt-A-Whirl | Bizaar | ||||
We Don't Die | Freek Show | Twiztid | Cameo | ||
2002 | Homies (w/Twiztid) | Paul Andresen | The Wraith: Shangri-La | Insane Clown Posse | Main Performers |
2004 | Bowling Balls | Paul Andresen | The Wraith: Hell's Pit | ||
Real Underground Baby | Ryan Hernandez | ||||
2005 | The People | Forgotten Freshness Volume 4 | |||
2006 | Blood Redrum | Hallowicked 2006 | |||
2007 | Evil is Afraid | Hallowicked 2007 | |||
2008 | The Tower | The Tempest | |||
2009 | In Yo Face | Paul Andresen | Bang! Pow! Boom! | ||
2010 | Miracles | ||||
Juggalo Island | |||||
Fonz Pond | |||||
2011 | It's All Over | ||||
Cocaine | Charges of Indictment | The Dayton Family | Cameo | ||
2012 | |||||
Chris Benoit | The Deka Brothers | The Mighty Death Pop! | Insane Clown Posse | Main Performers | |
Night of The Chainsaw | Roy Knyrim | ||||
Dub Sack | Gang Rags | Blaze Ya Dead Homie | Cameo | ||
2013 | |||||
Jump Around | Brian Kuma | Smothered, Covered & Chunked | Insane Clown Posse | Main Performers | |
Hate Her To Death | The Deka Brothers | The Mighty Death Pop! | |||
Where's God? | Douglas Schulze | ||||
When I'm Clownin' (Danny Brown Remix) (w/Boondox & Danny Brown) | Brian Kuma | ||||
2014 | Might Go Mad | The Garcia Brothers | Axe Murder Boyz | Featured Performers | |
Forever | Unknown | The Mighty Death Pop! | Insane Clown Posse | Main Performers | |
The Kreayshawn Song | Unknown | Forgotten Freshness Volume 5 | |||
Beautiful Doom | Unknown | Bang! Pow! Boom! | |||
Red Moon Howl | Official fan made video | Hallowicked 2014 | |||
2015 | Explosions | Unknown | The Marvelous Missing Link: Lost | ||
2016 | Falling Apart | Brain Archibald | |||
I See The Devil | |||||
2017 | Beautiful (Indestructible) | Unknown | Covered, Smothered & Chunked | ||
4 Life | Unknown | Non-album video | |||
7 Foot 8 Foot (w/Lyte) | Brian Archibald | ||||
Fuck My Dad (Richard Bruce) (w/Lyte, Jumpsteady & Shaggy 2 Dope) | Brian Kuma | ||||
FTTBBR | Unknown | Psychopathic Monstar EP | Lyte | Featured Performers | |
2018 | T.B.A. | Unknown | Fearless Fred Fury | Insane Clown Posse | Main Performers |
Solo music videos[edit]
Year | Title | Director(s) | Album | Artist |
---|---|---|---|---|
May 8, 2009 | Jealousy | The Shining | Violent J | |
May 25, 2017 | Tell These Bitches | F.T.F.O.M.F. | Shaggy 2 Dope | |
February 9, 2018 | The Knife |
Group music videos[edit]
Year | Title | Director(s) | Album | Artist |
---|---|---|---|---|
2007 | 'Duk Da Fuk Down' | Duk Da Fuk Down | Psychopathic Rydas | |
2014 | 'Surprize' | Reindeer Games | The Killjoy Club |
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Psypher music videos[edit]
Year | Title | Producer | Director(s) | Location | Artists |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011 | Psypher 1 | DJ Clay | Record Time (Roseville, MI) | Violent J, Anybody Killa, Jamie Madrox & Bootleg | |
Psypher 2 | St. Andrews Hall (Detroit, MI) | Shaggy 2 Dope, Blaze Ya Dead Homie, Monoxide Child, Boondox & Shoestring | |||
Psypher 3 | Brian Kuma | The Fillmore (Detroit, MI) | Insane Clown Posse, Twiztid, Drive-By & | ||
2012 | Psypher 4 | Zug Island | Insane Clown Posse, Twiztid, Drive-By, Cold 187um & The R.O.C. | ||
2017 | Psypher 5 (If We Were A Gang) | DJ Carlito | Insane Clown Posse, Anybody Killa, DJ Clay, Big Hoodoo, Blahzay Roze & Lyte | ||
Psypher 6 (Juggalo Love) | Seven | Columbus, OH | Insane Clown Posse, Big Hoodoo, Lyte & Ouija Macc (1st The Loony Goons song) |
References[edit]
Icp Songs Download
- ^ abcdef'Certification for Insane Clown Posse'. RIAA Gold and Platinum Certification Database. Retrieved 2008-05-05.
- ^ abcdefg'Insane Clown Posse Chart History: Billboard 200'. Billboard. Retrieved 2019-02-26.
- ^'Insane Clown Posse Chart History: Independent Albums'. Billboard. Retrieved 2019-02-26.
- ^'Insane Clown Posse Chart History: Rap Albums'. Billboard. Retrieved 2019-02-26.
- ^'Insane Clown Posse Chart History: Heatseekers Albums'. Billboard. Retrieved 2019-02-26.
- ^'The ARIA Report: Week Commencing 6 September 2004'(PDF) (758). Pandora Archive. October 20, 2004. Retrieved August 18, 2015.
- ^'Chart Log UK (1994–2010): I Am Arrows – Laura Izibor'. zobbel.de. Retrieved August 18, 2015.
- ^ ab'Fontana Partners With Psychopathic Records'. PR Newswire Association LLC. Retrieved 20 February 2010.
- ^ abMartens, Todd (April 2, 2007). 'Insane Clown Posse prosper even as album sales wane'. Reuters. Retrieved 2010-10-23.
- ^ abD'Angelo, Joe (2001-09-25). 'Insane Clown Posse Axed by Label, Launching Tour'. MTV. Retrieved 2010-08-05.
- ^'Random Notes'. Hatchet Herald. Psychopathic Records. 13 (13). October 9, 2010. Archived from the original on October 10, 2010. Retrieved October 8, 2010.
- ^'Upcoming Releases'. Hits Daily Double. HITS Digital Ventures. Archived from the original on April 25, 2015.
- ^ abcdefghijkl'allmusic ((( Insane Clown Posse - Charts & Awards - Billboard Albums )))'. Allmusic. Retrieved 2010-03-29.
- ^'UK Singles - 1952-2010'. Polyhex. Archived from the original on 2008-12-07. Retrieved 2010-04-29.
- ^ abcdefghijBruce, Joseph; Hobey Echlin (2003). 'Complete Discography'. In Nathan Fostey (ed.). ICP: Behind the Paint (2nd ed.). Royal Oak, Michigan: Psychopathic Records. pp. 550–591. ISBN0-9741846-0-8.
Download All Icp Albums Free Online
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