The Jerky Boys 2

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The Jerky Boys 2
Jerky Boys 2.jpg
Studio album by
The Jerky Boys
ReleasedAugust 16, 1994[1]
GenreComedy, Prank Calls
Length48:44
LabelSelect Records
ProducerJohn G. Brennan
Kamal Ahmed
The Jerky Boys
The Jerky Boys chronology
The Jerky Boys
(1993)
The Jerky Boys 2
(1994)
The Jerky Boys 3
(1996)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic3/5 stars link
RollingStonelink

Jerky Boys 2 is the second comedy album released by prank call artists, the Jerky Boys. The album was released on August 16, 1994, and was the final Jerky Boys album released on the Select Records label, distributed by Atlantic Records. Like their debut album, it also went Platinum. This album was also nominated for a Grammy Award at the 1995's Grammy's for Best Comedy Album, but lost to Sam Kinison's Live From Hell.

Track listing[]

  1. "Pablo Honey" (0:39)
  2. "Drinking Problem" (1:44)
  3. "Pet Cobra" (0:57)
  4. "Sol's Warts" (1:46)
  5. "Breast Enlargement" (2:17)
  6. "Roofing" (2:39)
  7. "Gay Hairdresser" (2:00)
  8. "Volunteer" (1:50)
  9. "Terrorist Pizza" (2:40)
  10. "Pico's Mexican Hairpiece" (2:38)
  11. "A Little Emergency" (1:05)
  12. "Sparky The Clown" (1:56)
  13. "Security Service" (3:48)
  14. "Sol's Nude Beach" (2:25)
  15. "Diamond Dealer" (1:55)
  16. "Sol's Naked Photo" (1:25)
  17. "The Mattress King" (1:52)
  18. "Ball Game Beating" (2:52)
  19. "Sporting Goods" (1:10)
  20. "Scaffolding" (1:05)
  21. "Sex Therapy" (1:45)
  22. "Sol's Phobia" (2:56)
  23. "Cremation Services" (1:42)
  24. "Pizza Lawyer" (2:41)
  25. "Fava Beans" (1:34)
  26. "Husband Beating" (1:23)
  27. "*Bonus Track" (0:06)

Trivia[]

English rock band Radiohead named their 1993 debut album, Pablo Honey, after the first call on this album (apparently having heard it on a bootleg tape), well before release of this material on CD.[2]

California Punk band Nofx released a live album called "I Heard They Suck Live!!", in which the guitar player (El Hefe), impersonates a part of "Sol's Warts" in between songs.

References[]

  1. ^ "The Boys Are Back, And They're Still Jerky On New Select Set". Billboard. 9 July 1994. Retrieved 2019-08-16.
  2. ^ Rollingstone
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