Class Clown by George Carlin

Class Clown

George Carlin

1972

Class Clown is a Spoken Word album by George Carlin, originally released in 1972. On Gatefold: 26 pressings tracked, owned by 18 collectors.

Sound DNA

  • Spoken Word
  • Comedy
  • sparse
  • sarcastic
  • witty

About

<i>Class Clown</i> is not only George Carlin’s signature album—it’s also, probably, the funniest and most incisive one ever made about attending Catholic school in the classic catechism era. That’s the gist, anyway, of the three tracks that begin its second half: “I Used to Be Irish Catholic,” “The Confessional,” and the theologically logic-twisting “Special Dispensation: Heaven, Hell, Purgatory and Limbo.” Add the much-memorized “Seven Words You Can Never Say on Television” and you have a comedy album that will never wear out.

via Apple Music

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Tracklist

Side A

  1. A1Class Clown - Bi-Labial Fricative / Attracting Attention / Squeamish16:11
  2. A2Wasted Time - Sharing A Swallow2:27
  3. A3Values (How Much Is That Dog Crap In The Window)5:15

Side B

  1. B1I Used To Be Irish Catholic2:10
  2. B2The Confessional4:58
  3. B3Special Dispensation - Heaven, Hell, Purgatory And Limbo3:42
  4. B4Heavy Mysteries2:02
  5. B5Muhammad Ali - America The Beautiful4:35
  6. B6Seven Words You Can Never Say On Television7:07

Credits

Performers

18 collectors on Gatefold own this · 26 pressings tracked on Gatefold