Track Listing DISC 1: 1. Shoot 2. Hair Piece, The 3. Sex in Commercials 4. Drugs 5. Birth Control 6. Son of Wino 7. Divorce Game 8. Ed Sullivan Self Taught 9. Let's Make a Deal 10. 11 O'Clock News, The 11. Class Clown: Bi-Labial Fricative / Attracting Attention / Squeamish 12. Wasting Time / Sharing A Swallow 13. Values (How Much Is That Dog Crap in the Window?)
DISC 2: 1. I Used to Be Irish Catholic 2. Confessional, The 3. Special Dispensation / Heaven, Hell, Purgatory And Limbo 4. Heavy Mysteries 5. Muhammad Ali - (with America The Beautiful) 6. Seven Words You Can Never Say on Television 7. Welcome to My Job 8. Occupation: Foole 9. White Harlem 10. Hallway Groups, The 11. Black Consciousness 12. New York Voices 13. Grass Swept the Neighborhood 14. Childhood Cliches 15. Cute Little Farts 16. Raisin Rhetoric 17. Filthy Words
| Details | | Playing Time: | 146 min. | | Distributor: | WEA (Distributor) | | Recording Type: | Live | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Producers: Monte Kay, Jack Lewis. Compilation producers: George Carlin, Yves Beauvais. Recorded at The Cellar Door, Washington D.C. Originally released as FM & AM on Little David (7214) in January 1972; The Celebrity Theatre, San Carlos, California. Originally released as OCCUPATION: FOOLE on Little David (1005) in October 1973; Santa Monica Civic Auditorium, Santa Monica, California. Originally released as CLASS CLOWN on Little Daivd (1004) in September 1972. Includes liner notes by Tony Hendra. All tracks have been digitally remastered. A box set version of George Carlin's first three albums in his (then new) guise as a young Lenny Bruce retooled for the counter-culture. Considering how topical some of Carlin's routines are (references to boxer Carmine Basilio, for example, are certain to baffle younger listeners), it's astonishing how funny most of this stuff remains, particularly when he's reminiscing about his Catholic childhood (an encounter with Sister Mary Discipline; wondering if anybody ever went to Purgatory for eating beef jerky). Other bits include a meditation on the effect of Scope mouthwash on borderline psychotics, and a hilarious imitation of other comics imitating TV host Ed Sullivan. There's also a comparison of Black and Irish consciousness--of the latter he remarks, "When they're conscious, they're great..."
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