Details

Track Listing 1. Public Service Announcement - (skit) 2. Intro 3. Gospel Weed Song 4. F*** Your Life - (with Sindee Syringe) 5. Fat Father - (skit) 6. Let the Record Skip 7. I'm in Luv Witchu 8. Rockstar 9. Ghetto Music - (featuring Swifty/Stic. Man/King Gordy) 10. Life Styles - (skit) 11. I'm So Cool 12. Porno Bitches - (featuring Big Boi/Devin The Dude) 13. Crush on You 14. Bad Day 15. I Need a Friend 16. One Chance 17. Hip Hop - (with Eminem) 18. Doctor Doctor - (with Obie Trice) 19. Coming Home - (featuring Kuniva/Raphael Saadiq) 20. Nuthin' at All - (with D-12)
| Details | | Contributing artists: | Big Boi, D-12, D12, Devin The Dude, Devon The Dude, Eminem, King Gordy, Kuniva, Obie Trice, Raphael Saadiq, Sindee Syringe, Stic. Man, Stick Man, Swifty, Young Miles | | Producer: | Chav Guevara, Eminem, Erick Sermon, Hi-Tek, Raphael Saadiq | | Distributor: | BMG (distributor) | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Personnel: Bizarre (rap vocals); Eminem, King Gordy, Obie Trice, Raphael Saadiq, Big Boi, Kuniva, Devin The Dude, Sindee Syringe, Swifty, Stic. Man (rap vocals). Bizarre is known as the Ol' Dirty Bastard of Eminem's D12 posse--an out-of-control, just-maybe-crazy guy whose visual hook is that he's always wearing a shower cap. After a series of guest spots on Eminem's records, Bizarre manages to define himself as a solo artist on HANNICAP CIRCUS. Although the Marshall Mathers-produced first single "Rockstar" sounds suspiciously close to Mathers's own "Just Lose It" and D12's "My Band," the rest of the album sounds more like the 2005 equivalent to Blowfly's cheerfully obscene R&B party records of the '70s. Bizarre's unique sensibilities are such that a track called "Porno Bitches" is the closest thing to a conventional love song, and "Gospel Weed Song" delivers exactly what the title promises. On HANNICAP CIRCUS, the goofiness of Bizarre's silly lyrics and between-song skits almost overshadows the fact that he and his co-producers give the laughs more substance through the stacks of solid beats and the inventive use of samples on tracks like "Let the Record Skip."
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