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Straight outta Detroit come these pasty-faced rock 'n' roll rappers with a taste for gore, a thirst for blood, and a
love of clowns. Insane Clown Posse are an underground phenomenon that has only recently enjoyed nationwide success, due in
part to their being dropped by Disney-owned Hollywood Records. Combining the shock-rock tactics of Kiss with the white-boy
rap style of the early Beastie Boys, rappers Shaggy 2 Dope and Violent J have carved out a massive following with their brand
of horrorcore rap, carnival theatrics and wild live shows.
Formed in 1990 as Inner City Posse, ICP were originally
a local gang-based posse, but they slimmed down to a duo by the time they recorded their '91 indie debut, Dog Beats. Although
the clown makeup was already in full effect, the ICP manifesto had yet to begin. By the time the group recorded their official
debut full-length as Insane Clown Posse, Carnival Of Carnage, they had formed a concept around their releases around the concept
of Jokers' Cards and the Dark Carnival. The six Cards were supposed to symbolize a countdown to the end of the world, as ushered
in by the Dark Carnival. This Apocalyptic vision may sound too dark for hip-hop b-boys, but the trailer-trash white kids in
Detroit ate it up like candy and the group quickly became a local sensation. Influenced by the local marketing techniques
of fellow Detroit rappers Kid Rock and ESham, ICP toured constantly, covered the streets in flyers, made a variety of T-shirts,
and sold special tapes and singles to commemorate every major performance. They also became notorious for their onstage use
of Fago, a cheap Detroit-based soda that leaves audiences and clubs sticky and sweet.
Ringmaster and a slew of EPs
followed and continued ICP's tradition of Stephen King/ Clive Barker tales of horror mixed with old-school beats and rock
guitars. The group made enough noise that Jive Records picked them up for their third and arguably best album, Riddle Box,
which featured their underground hit "Chicken Huntin'." Though the album sold well in their stronghold areas, it wasn't a
national hit and ICP were dropped from Jive. More touring and street marketing followed and eventually ICP were picked up
by Hollywood Records. However, a widely-publicized split with the Mickey Mouse label on the release day of their album, The
Great Milenko, found the group with an anticipated new disc on their hands and no label to release it. Smelling controversy
in the air, Island Records bought out their contract, slapped on the tracks that Hollywood had censored, and finally released
the album in 1998.
Featuring guest spots from Alice Cooper, former Guns N' Roses guitarist Slash and ex-Sex Pistol
Steve Jones Milenko was the fourth Jokers' Card and ICP's heaviest, most consistent album. Despite virtually no radio airplay
and no MTV play whatsoever, the album quickly went gold and secured these horrific, wacky clowns a permanent place in the
annals of shock-rock history.
Finally, after years of hard work and underground success, ICP are a nationally successful
outfit with a huge fanbase and theater-level tours. Their merchandising business makes a killing, and new albums of rarities
(including the recently-released Forgotten Freshness) and hard-to-find EPs and singles continue to flood the market. And with
Island re-releasing the group's entire Psychotic Records catalog, ICP fans are sure to have yet another clown-filled money
pit to dump their parents' hard-earned cash into.
This Biography was written by Frank Meyer
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