Happy 14½
1992 EP by King Missile
Happy 14½ | |
---|---|
EP by King Missile | |
Released | 1992 |
Genre | Avant-garde |
Length | 14:30 |
Label | Atlantic |
Producer | Kramer, King Missile |
Happy 14½ is an EP by avant-garde band King Missile. It was released in 1992, shortly before the band's album Happy Hour. The EP was intended for promotional use only, and not supposed to be sold; nonetheless, copies are sometimes available in "used" sections of record stores because some people who received the EP sold it anyway.[1]
Just as Happy Hour is approximately one hour long, Happy 14½ is approximately 14½ minutes in length.
Track listing
All lyrics by John S. Hall (except "All Things Everywhere," by Chris Xefos).
- "Martin Scorsese (PG-13)" – 2:48
- This track is the "clean" version of "Martin Scorsese" from Happy Hour. In the "PG-13" version, Hall omits the original's 13 instances of the expletive fuck but does not edit the original's violent content.
- "Detachable Penis" – 3:21
- This track also appears on Happy Hour.
- "Nietzsche Sneezes" – 3:27
- "All Things Everywhere" – 2:47
- These two tracks appear exclusively on this release.
- "The Bunny Song" [live] – 1:57
- The studio version of this track appears on the 1988 album They.
Personnel
- John S. Hall – lead vocals (except on "All Things Everywhere")
- Dave Rick – guitars
- Chris Xefos – bass guitar, keyboards, backing vocals, lead vocals on "All Things Everywhere"
- Roger Murdock – drums, percussion
References
- ^ "Discography". Laundry Lists of Nonsense. Retrieved 2008-05-29.
- v
- t
- e
- John S. Hall
- Dave Rick
- Roger Murdock
- Brent Cordero
- Dogbowl
- Alex DeLaszlo
- R. B. Korbet
- Charles Curtis
- Steve Dansiger
- Chris Xefos
- Jane Scarpantoni
- Sasha Forte
- Bradford Reed
- Fluting on the Hump
- They
- Mystical Shit
- The Way to Salvation
- Happy Hour
- King Missile
- Failure
- The Psychopathology of Everyday Life
- Royal Lunch
- Happy 14½
- This Fuckin' Guy
- The Green Album
- "Take Stuff from Work"
- "The Box"
- "No Point"
- "Jesus Was Way Cool"
- "My Heart Is a Flower"
- "Detachable Penis"
- "(Why Are We) Trapped?"
- "Martin Scorsese"
- "Love Is..."
- "America Kicks Ass"
solo albums
- Real Men (with Kramer)
- The Body Has a Head
- Spoken word
- Anti-folk
- Shimmy Disc
- Kramer
- Bongwater
- Faceboy