A Carnival Christmas

A Carnival Christmas is the third EP by American hip hop group Insane Clown Posse, released on December 6, 1994, by Psychopathic Records. It was reissued in 1997 by Island Records with alternate artwork. The reissue removed the EP's final two tracks.[2] The first two songs on the EP are included in the compilation Forgotten Freshness Volumes 1 & 2. It is the 5th overall release by Insane Clown Posse.

A Carnival Christmas
Cover to the original edition of the album
EP by
ReleasedDecember 6, 1994
Recorded1994
GenreHorrorcore
LabelPsychopathic Records
Island Records (reissue)
ProducerMike E. Clark
Insane Clown Posse chronology
The Terror Wheel
(1994)
A Carnival Christmas
(1994)
Forgotten Freshness
(1995)
Alternative cover
1997 reissue.
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Production

"Santa Killas" contains a sample from the Cher song Gypsys, Tramps & Thieves. "Santa Killas" featured a guest verse by Mike E. Clark and Fink the Eastside G, a local rapper.[2] ICP had a falling out with Fink after he stole money from Psychopathic Records.[2]

Legacy

"Santa Killas" has the first known use of the Juggalo slang "Whoop whoop!" which later became a greeting among fans. "Santa Killas" and "It's Coming" were removed from the EP when it was reissued by Island Records. ICP explained that the tracks were "outdated".[2] "It's Coming" is a teaser for ICP's then-upcoming album, Riddle Box, which was the third Joker's Card. In October 2016 it was announced that ICP will be rereleasing the EP on vinyl in late 2016.

Track listing

Original release
No.TitleLength
1."Santa's a Fat Bitch"4:22
2."Red Christmas"5:15
3."Santa Killas" (featuring Mike E. Clark and Fink the Eastside G)5:57
4."It's Coming"4:09
Total length:19:44
Island reissue
No.TitleLength
1."Santa's a Fat Bitch"4:22
2."Red Christmas"5:13
Total length:9:37

Personnel

  • Violent J – vocals, composer
  • Shaggy 2 Dope – vocals, turntables
  • Fink the Eastside G – guest vocals
  • Mike E. Clark – turntables, production, guest vocals, engineer, mixing
gollark: And yes, it is very chaotic, potatOS ships two incompatible binary object serialization libraries, its own fork of GPS with dimension/server support, elliptic curve cryptography with SHA256 but also separate non-cryptographically-secure checksums for some reason, and a ton of random programs, some of which are actually just inlined in the code.
gollark: Just delete everything but native APIs and Lua stuff from `_G`, and then reinitialize everything with PotatoBIOS.
gollark: What if I remove all the CraftOS APIs from my programs before they run? WHAT THEN?
gollark: I mean, it was based on Dan's code, and contributors provided presumably MIT-licensed code.
gollark: Can you *do* that?

References

  1. Allmusic review
  2. Bruce, Joseph; Hobey Echlin (August 2003). "Complete Discography". In Nathan Fostey (ed.). ICP: Behind the Paint (2nd ed.). Royal Oak, Michigan: Psychopathic Records. pp. 543–556. ISBN 0974184608.
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