

Released through PSYCHOPATHIC and available on LP. Vinyl release of Insane Clown Posse - Fearless Fred Fury. Includes the singles "W.T.F.!" and "Fury". Fearless Fred Fury is the fifteenth studio album by hip hop duo Insane Clown Posse, and their fourth Joker Card in the second Deck of the Dark Carnival Saga. Last year, the group performed an acoustic set at its annual Big Ballers Christmas Party, a first for the pair, and they’re planning more unplugged performances in the future, including at this summer’s 20th annual Gathering of the Juggalos festival.Vinyl LP pressing.
#FEARLESS FRED FURY PROFESSIONAL#
“We’re going to end it probably when we’re, like, 60-something,” says J, who speaks in the bass-heavy cadence of a professional wrestler cutting a promo.īut the hunger for new experiences, both career- and life-wise, continues to push ICP forward.

#FEARLESS FRED FURY SERIES#
ICP shows no signs of slowing there are two more chapters due in its current album cycle, and the group plans a five-album series to close out its epic “Dark Carnival” saga of good vs. “This is the best ICP is right now, in 2019. “We poured our guts into this record,” says J, a 46-year-old father of two. The set ranges from the unadulterated rage of tracks like “WTF!” and “Fury!” to more playful tracks like “Low,” which interpolates the Zombies’ “Time of the Season” and “West Vernor Ave.,” which borrows from Eddy Grant’s “Electric Avenue.” The Fred Fury character is the personification of regret fighting back and taking control of your destiny is a major theme of the album.

The anger he felt is manifested in the aggressive sound of “Fearless Fred Fury,” out Friday. “It was like a physical pain,” J says of the 2016 revelations. The departure came after J found out Garcia was secretly dating his niece. The group’s new album, “Fearless Fred Fury,” is inspired in part by the “epic betrayal” the group felt when their one-time protégé, James “Otis” Garcia, left the group’s record label Psychopathic Records and signed with Majik Ninja Entertainment, headed up by their former friends-turned-rivals Twiztid. Still, not all is rosy in the world of ICP. “I’m always telling the guys, you need to accept your role as icons. “ICP will always have a stable in pop culture,” says Hill, who compares them, in that regard, to Kiss. Rudy “Rude Boy” Hill, a long-time associate of the group, chalks up the group’s staying power, at least partially, to the fact that their facepaint allows them to remain ageless. And that’s so much different than anything we’ve ever experienced.” “Everybody’s got respect for us, you know? And we can go pretty much wherever we want. It’s not like the war zone no more,” says J, real name Joseph Bruce. “There have been so many moments like that, where we can stick our head up out from the underground and look around and it’s not like it used to be.
#FEARLESS FRED FURY TV#
Last month, ABC’s “Fresh Off the Boat” weaved the plot of an episode around ICP, and TV shows like “Workaholics” and “American Dad!” have made references to the Clowns. Later that year, ICP sat down with “Sway in the Morning” on SiriusXM’s Shade 45, the hip-hop station founded by the Clowns’ one-time rival, Eminem. In 2017, the group appeared on New York radio station Hot 97’s popular “Ebro in the Morning” program, where they were introduced as “legends” of rap music. In recent years, ICP has walked through doors that were previously closed to them.
