Search - Ned Gerblansky :: Chef Aid: The South Park Album (Television Compilation)

Chef Aid: The South Park Album (Television Compilation)
Ned Gerblansky
Chef Aid: The South Park Album (Television Compilation)
Genres: Special Interest, Pop, Soundtracks, Broadway & Vocalists
 
  •  Track Listings (21) - Disc #1

"Ooh, suck on my chocolate salty balls / Stick 'em in your mouth and suck 'em." If that line offends you, not only should you stop from reading any further, you should definitely avoid South Park at all costs. Rabid fans o...  more »

     
   

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CD Details

All Artists: Ned Gerblansky
Title: Chef Aid: The South Park Album (Television Compilation)
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 5
Label: Sony
Original Release Date: 11/24/1998
Release Date: 11/24/1998
Album Type: Explicit Lyrics, Soundtrack
Genres: Special Interest, Pop, Soundtracks, Broadway & Vocalists
Styles: Comedy & Spoken Word, Musicals
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 074646937723, 5099749170025, 5099749305229

Synopsis

Amazon.com
"Ooh, suck on my chocolate salty balls / Stick 'em in your mouth and suck 'em." If that line offends you, not only should you stop from reading any further, you should definitely avoid South Park at all costs. Rabid fans of the deliciously disgusting animated series, however, will rejoice at how perfect this disc is; rather than hand you a whack of semi-whimsical material, the South Park boys chose to give the people what they want, and what they want is plenty of songs by the cast of South Park, not just about them. So alongside SP-related performances by Master P ("Kenny's Dead," on which he raps, "My little homey Kenny died tonight"), Perry Farrell ("Hot Lava"), Elton John ("Wake Up Wendy"), and the bizarrely paired Ozzy Osbourne and Ol' Dirty Bastard ("Nowhere to Run"), you'll find the best of the best: songs sung by the original cast. Most appropriately, there is plenty of Chef (a.k.a. Isaac Hayes) action, including "Simultaneous" ("I'm talking 'bout you and me and Winona Ryder / Simultaneous"), his love song for Kathie Lee Gifford ("No Substitute"), and the aforementioned "Chocolate Salty Balls." Chef Aid's undisputed champion track, however, is the tender, passionate, and incredibly touching Styx cover, "Come Sail Away"--performed with more emotion than Neil Diamond could ever muster--by South Park's head cranky son of a crack whore, Cartman. Fans of the show will also be happy to know that this is not the sung-at-top-speed version, like in the episode, but instead a fully drawn out, tortured-artist cut. So often, the funniest ideas on TV translate to the lamest recordings alive; happily, this is not the case with this collection. --Denise Sheppard

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Member CD Reviews

Drew V. from POWNAL, ME
Reviewed on 7/1/2007...
This is the BMG manufactured release

CD Reviews

I'm......SAILING away......
12/12/1999
(5 out of 5 stars)

"this is a very good cd for fans of south park. however, if you REALLY want to hear the music, get the extreme version, because this is still edited."
I love this cd!
01/18/1999
(5 out of 5 stars)

"If you are a big fan of rap and like seeing Kenny die every episode then liston to Kenny's dead by Master P. Hearing the kids in Bubble goose made me crack up. The funniest parts on the cd is hearing Sid Greenfield and Matt Stone arguing cduring the song Horny."