5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
rock-bottom-genius, July 17, 2004
this is one of THE BEST COMEDY ALBUMS OF ALL TIME...NO stupid set-up/punchlines, NO old material re-hashed, NO JOKES...just straight foreward, nothing- to-lose, improvisational rants and tyrades from a bitter aging (...)....AMAZING!!!!!
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Sequel To Genuis is always a Crucible..., December 4, 2010
The Day The Laughter Died Part II may just be the most reviled comedy album of recent times. There's a reason for that. But then again, Dice is no ordinary comdidian, and one can't judge him like that. Like Andy Kaufman before him, he began as a "Song and Dance Man" and then migrated into comedy/performance art and in the process culminating--at the top of his career--the original The Day the Laughter Died, a work of such stunning genuis that now, 20 years later, it is only just beginning to be understood.
But after several sucessful albums, Dice tired of the routines he'd set up. And this album is Dice raging against the Machine. The Machine is Stand-Up, and Dice is having none of it. He's his own man here and like before, he's got no material to fall back on, and he will succeed or fail on his own merits. And yes, the album does indeed fail as typical stand-up. In fact, I was befuddled when I first heard it. It was a somehow an angrier Dice, who stated that "...my career...I don't have one right now." Pretty bold words, actually. Ballsy, in fact. It reads like a man who is honest and is honest about his art; it's about putting it all out there, on the line. And Dice has integrity. And on this album, it shows. Yes, he bombs in most places...but there are some bright, bright spots that shine as genuis. Dice fans will love it. Dice haters will hate it. Those not familiar with performance art will be confused.
Dice realized that Comedy does not equal Laughter. This album is not for everyone. It isn't even for most people. But if you are interested in comedy, and if you're interested in the honesty involved, and the hard corners and sharp edges of a man who was trying to bring the world kicking and screaming into his own sphere, then get the album. Listen to it. Then put it away for some time, and come back to it later. You'll recognize what the man was trying to do.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
All of a sudden no one knows c*nt farts, April 23, 2009
This review is from: Day Laughter Died 2 (Audio CD)
Simply the greatest comedy album ever. The Day The Laughter Died Part Two is filthy, bizarre, and relentless. This album isn't for people who want to hear what Dice was doing at Madison Square Garden. With a stunned crowd that is to shocked to understand the angle Dice has taken he is start to finish on point with his anger and his rants. Dices anger is comedic genies as he blows minute issues such as butter that has yet to melt, critics that may or may not have bashed him, and an audience members tie that should only be worn in order to commit suicide. Though his fame had subsided his ability as a comic was at a true pinnacle. Dice managed to borrow from comics to reach his highest heights but discovered a completely original voice when the public eye was no longer watching. This isn't about laughter.
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