Dice Rules

Dice Rules is a comedy double album by comedian Andrew Dice Clay, which was released in 1991. It was released on record producer Rick Rubin's record label Def American and subsequently re-issued on Warner Bros. Records. There is also a film of the same name which came out in May 1991[1][2], which received mostly negative reviews from critics and was nominated for three Razzie Awards including Worst Picture, Worst Actor (Andrew Dice Clay) and Worst Screenplay. The film currently holds a 9% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on eleven reviews.[3]

Dice Rules
Live album by
Released1991
RecordedFebruary 21-22, 1990 and October 25, 1990
GenreComedy
Length54:37
LabelDef American Recordings, Warner Bros.
Andrew Dice Clay chronology
The Day the Laughter Died
(1990)
Dice Rules
(1991)
40 Too Long
(1992)

The first side (tracks 1-20) was recorded at Madison Square Garden with the second side (tracks 21-39) being recorded in a smaller, more intimate club setting (Rascals Comedy Club in New Jersey). The closing track, "Brooklyn Bad Boy", is an original song by Clay which was also heard during the end credits of the Dice Rules film.

Track listing

  1. "Intro"
  2. "How Are Ya?"
  3. "Birds"
  4. "Phone Sex"
  5. "Ya Can't Be Nice to Them"
  6. "Christmas Presents"
  7. "Hoidy Toidy Chicks"
  8. "Opportunity in America (Al Capone's Safe)"
  9. "Japs"
  10. "Handicaps & Cripples"
  11. "Don't Move"
  12. "Double Parking"
  13. "The Car Ride (Goin' to a Party)"
  14. "The Driveway"
  15. "Subway Travel"
  16. "The Grocery Store"
  17. "Industrial Size"
  18. "The Urinal"
  19. "1989-A Review"
  20. "Bad Press"
  21. "Backwards"
  22. "Shakin' Hands"
  23. "Chicks Aren't Funny (Joey Will)"
  24. "Bambi"
  25. "3 Beautiful Dates"
  26. "Action"
  27. "Debbie Duz Everything"
  28. "Filthy in Bed"
  29. "Salt & Pepper"
  30. "Smokin' for Your Health"
  31. "The News"
  32. "Fat Orgasms"
  33. "Black Chicks"
  34. "A Vibrant Beautiful Woman"
  35. "Woman's World"
  36. "The First Blow-Job"
  37. "People Are Pricks"
  38. "Ya Hear?"
  39. "Apartment Life"
  40. "Brooklyn Bad Boy"

Notes and references

  1. Dice Rules (1991) - IMDb
  2. Movies - New York Times (subscription required)
  3. "Dice Rules (1991)". www.rottentomatoes.com. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 26 March 2020.

Dice Rules on Apple I-Tunes

gollark: It's definitely possible to set a handler for signals or something.
gollark: How come *instruction sets* come under intellectual property law, anyway?
gollark: Oh, never mind, I don't think the actual CPU is open source, just the instruction set.
gollark: Oh, do you want one process to ~~respond to~~ do something when it gets signals from another?
gollark: If I wanted an open source CPU and had bucketloads of money I would just buy RaptorCS things.
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