Carnival of Chaos
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Carnival of Chaos | ||
Studio album by GWAR | ||
Released | March 25, 1997 | |
Recorded | 1997 | |
Genre | Thrash metal/Punk | |
Length | 74:36 | |
Label | Metal Blade Records | |
Producer(s) | Ron Goudie, Mike Derks (uncredited) | |
Professional reviews | ||
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GWAR chronology | ||
RagNaRok (1995) |
Carnival of Chaos (1997) |
We Kill Everything (1999) |
GWAR's sixth album, Carnival of Chaos (1997) seems to be influenced even more by Faith No More and Mr. Bungle than earlier albums. It can be best described as GWAR's bid for musical expansion. There are likely more styles experimented with here than on any other album. It is perhaps most notable as their longest album, and also as the album that contains Stampe's solo number: "Don't Need a Man". Hunter Jackson also returns in "The Private Pain of Techno Destructo", and there is an odd ballad entitled "Sammy" about the rotting corpse of Sammy Davis Jr. which is worthy of mention. "In Her Fear" is Oderus's swan song, and Beefcake the Mighty gives a memorable song in "Hate Love Songs" - Casey Orr's last song as a lead vocalist with the band. A few more jokes ("Scallop Boat", "Gonna Kill U", "I Suck on My Thumb"), round out the album.
Carnival of Chaos is the last GWAR album to feature Peter Lee as Flattus Maximus - due to recurring stomach problems (stemming from a gunshot wound sustained in a carjacking four years prior), he left the band shortly after the 1997 Halloween Tour (and after "Dawn of the Day of the Night of the Penguins," the video that corresponds with Carnival of Chaos, was recorded).
"Don't Need A Man" was not originally meant to be a GWAR song. It was supposed to be just Stampe singing and Michael Derks (Balsac the Jaws of Death) on piano. It ended up featuring Brad Roberts (Jizmak Da Gusha), Derks (sequencing the upright bass part, the piano and the guitar) and Stampe. Derks produced the track, but received no credit.
About nine or so minutes after "Don't Need A Man" is a clip of "Drop Drawers." This was supposed to go on the album, along with a complete version of "The Private Pain of Techno Destructo." The latter had to be changed, due to Paramount's refusal to give permission to use music from the 1967 Star Trek episode, "Amok Time" (there is a "Slave Pit Single, released after this album, that features it). The former, which included a cover of Billy Thorpe's "Children of the Sun," had to be cut, save for a short clip at the end. "Drop Drawers" can be found on Slaves Going Single, an extremely rare B-sides collection released between We Kill Everything and Violence Has Arrived on Slave Pit Records. The latter can be heard, minus the unlicensed cover, on the album (just after Techno sings "You'll just make me..."), and the full song (except for a slight cut-off of Techno at the end) on the RAWGWAR Slave Pit Single.
"Sammy" is the longest song on this album, despite "Don't Need A Man"'s 12:40 track length (most of it is silence; the actual song is a little less than 4:30 long). Clocking in at 6:57, it and the title track from their 1999 follow-up, We Kill Everything, are the longest songs by GWAR (it too is 6:57 in length). Carnival of Chaos itself is GWAR's longest album, exceeding 74 minutes.