From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Racially Yours
Studio album by
Released2000
Recorded1990–1993
Genre Folk rock, acoustic rock
Length1:00:40
LabelFour Alarm Records
Producer The Frogs
The Frogs chronology
Bananimals
(1999)
Racially Yours
(2000)
Hopscotch Lollipop Sunday Surprise
(2000)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic [1]
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music [2]

Racially Yours is an album by the band the Frogs, released in 2000. [3] [4] The album was originally presented to Homestead Records in the early '90s, but they refused to release it due to its controversial subject matter. [3] At this point the album only consisted of the first 12 songs. After much delay, it was released in 2000 on Four Alarm Records with an additional 13 tracks, and a tongue-in-cheek sticker proclaiming it "the most controversial album of all time."[ citation needed]

Unlike the sexually charged and comedic material on It's Only Right and Natural and My Daughter the Broad, Racially Yours focuses on subjects such as American racism, genocide and patriotism. The songs are sung from the point of view of both African Americans and white Americans. [5] The lyrics are as serious as they are satirical; in the song "Blackman, Blackman", Dennis quips, "a black man's heaven is a white man's hell." In "The Flag", Jimmy urges, "brother, let's make the flag red, white and 'black'."

Critical reception

The A.V. Club wrote that "at 60 musically primitive minutes, Racially Yours can feel as much like cultural homework as any number of albums that wear strident identity politics on their sleeve, but it's an audacious footnote that fully earns its notorious reputation." [6] SF Weekly wrote: "Surprisingly, the album is less over-the-top parody than expected; in fact, it's relatively somber and serious, making interpretation even more difficult." [7]

Track listing

  1. "Truth"
  2. "Holidays 4 King"
  3. "Sorry I'm White"
  4. "White Guy"
  5. "400 Years"
  6. "Racially Yours"
  7. "Now You Know You're Black"
  8. "White Like Me"
  9. "My Slave"
  10. "Freedom"
  11. "Whitefully Dead"
  12. "BlackMan, BlackMan"
  13. "Full of Monkeys"
  14. "I Had a Dream"
  15. "Revolution"
  16. "Massa"
  17. "Darkmeat 4 Sale"
  18. "The Flag"
  19. "An Unwanted Child & A Wanted Man"
  20. "2 Blacks Don't Make a White"
  21. "The Purification of the Race"
  22. "You're a Bigot"
  23. "The Blue-eyed Devil & Brown-eyed Angel"
  24. "Uncle Sam Loves U"
  25. "Prejudiced"

Personnel

  • Jimmy Flemion – Guitars, Keyboards, Vocals on 01–03, 05–10, 13, 15–23, 25
  • Dennis Flemion – Drums, Keyboards, Vocals on 04, 11–12, 14, 24

References

  1. ^ Racially Yours at AllMusic
  2. ^ Larkin, Colin (2006). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music. Vol. 3. MUZE. p. 623.
  3. ^ a b "The Frogs | Biography & History". AllMusic.
  4. ^ Masley, Ed (2 Dec 2000). "Conventional wisdom". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. C11.
  5. ^ "Frogs". Chicago Reader. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  6. ^ "The Frogs: Racially Yours". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  7. ^ "The Frogs Racially Yours (Four Alarm)". SF Weekly. Retrieved 28 April 2021.

External links



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Racially Yours
Studio album by
Released2000
Recorded1990–1993
Genre Folk rock, acoustic rock
Length1:00:40
LabelFour Alarm Records
Producer The Frogs
The Frogs chronology
Bananimals
(1999)
Racially Yours
(2000)
Hopscotch Lollipop Sunday Surprise
(2000)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic [1]
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music [2]

Racially Yours is an album by the band the Frogs, released in 2000. [3] [4] The album was originally presented to Homestead Records in the early '90s, but they refused to release it due to its controversial subject matter. [3] At this point the album only consisted of the first 12 songs. After much delay, it was released in 2000 on Four Alarm Records with an additional 13 tracks, and a tongue-in-cheek sticker proclaiming it "the most controversial album of all time."[ citation needed]

Unlike the sexually charged and comedic material on It's Only Right and Natural and My Daughter the Broad, Racially Yours focuses on subjects such as American racism, genocide and patriotism. The songs are sung from the point of view of both African Americans and white Americans. [5] The lyrics are as serious as they are satirical; in the song "Blackman, Blackman", Dennis quips, "a black man's heaven is a white man's hell." In "The Flag", Jimmy urges, "brother, let's make the flag red, white and 'black'."

Critical reception

The A.V. Club wrote that "at 60 musically primitive minutes, Racially Yours can feel as much like cultural homework as any number of albums that wear strident identity politics on their sleeve, but it's an audacious footnote that fully earns its notorious reputation." [6] SF Weekly wrote: "Surprisingly, the album is less over-the-top parody than expected; in fact, it's relatively somber and serious, making interpretation even more difficult." [7]

Track listing

  1. "Truth"
  2. "Holidays 4 King"
  3. "Sorry I'm White"
  4. "White Guy"
  5. "400 Years"
  6. "Racially Yours"
  7. "Now You Know You're Black"
  8. "White Like Me"
  9. "My Slave"
  10. "Freedom"
  11. "Whitefully Dead"
  12. "BlackMan, BlackMan"
  13. "Full of Monkeys"
  14. "I Had a Dream"
  15. "Revolution"
  16. "Massa"
  17. "Darkmeat 4 Sale"
  18. "The Flag"
  19. "An Unwanted Child & A Wanted Man"
  20. "2 Blacks Don't Make a White"
  21. "The Purification of the Race"
  22. "You're a Bigot"
  23. "The Blue-eyed Devil & Brown-eyed Angel"
  24. "Uncle Sam Loves U"
  25. "Prejudiced"

Personnel

  • Jimmy Flemion – Guitars, Keyboards, Vocals on 01–03, 05–10, 13, 15–23, 25
  • Dennis Flemion – Drums, Keyboards, Vocals on 04, 11–12, 14, 24

References

  1. ^ Racially Yours at AllMusic
  2. ^ Larkin, Colin (2006). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music. Vol. 3. MUZE. p. 623.
  3. ^ a b "The Frogs | Biography & History". AllMusic.
  4. ^ Masley, Ed (2 Dec 2000). "Conventional wisdom". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. C11.
  5. ^ "Frogs". Chicago Reader. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  6. ^ "The Frogs: Racially Yours". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 27 April 2021.
  7. ^ "The Frogs Racially Yours (Four Alarm)". SF Weekly. Retrieved 28 April 2021.

External links




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