Boot to the Head

This article is about the album by The Frantics. For the sketch that inspired its title, see Last Will and Temperament.
Boot to the Head
Studio album by The Frantics
Released 1987
Recorded 1986
Genre Comedy
Length 44:49
Label Attic Records
Producer Marvin Dolgay
The Frantics chronology
Frantic Times
(1984)
Boot to the Head
(1987)
Official Bootleg CD
(2004)

Boot to the Head is a Canadian comedy album, performed by The Frantics comedy troupe.[1][2] Originally released as an LP in 1987, it was re-issued in 1996 as a CD with the same track listing. The album features a number of skits from their radio show Frantic Times, as well as a few sketches that could not be aired to a general audience. The sketches were recorded over a three-day period in front of a live audience at the Toronto Free Theatre.

Personnel

Track listing

  1. "A Piece of Pie" – 4:33
  2. "I Shot Bambi's Mother" – 1:20
  3. "Driving Chicks Mad" – 3:23
  4. "A Poem" – 0:35
  5. "Game Show, Game Show" – 2:02
  6. "Bill from Bala" – 4:42
  7. "A Poem" – 3:11
  8. "Architecture Today" – 3:11
  9. "Mrs. G" – 2:24
  10. "Worshippers 'R' Us" – 4:05
  11. "You People Are Fat" – 3:32
  12. "Making Love" – 2:14
  13. "A Poem" – 1:12
  14. "Make Up Dirty Words" – 1:58
  15. "You Scare the **** Out Of Me" – 2:53
  16. "Ti Kwan Leep" – 4:52
  17. "Boot to the Head" – 1:36

"Ti Kwan Leep" is one of the most famous skits from this album, followed by the title song "Boot to the Head". These are both regularly played on the Doctor Demento radio show. In the skit, there is a conversation between Ed Gruberman and a martial arts master over the relative merits of harmonious Eastern philosophy versus "trashing bozos". This soon devolves into an all-out brawl. The song recites a long litany of people doing idiotic (in the minds of the performers, at least) things, and recommending that we "Give them a boot to the head!" However, their iconic phrase became famous three years earlier in "Last Will and Temperament" from their Frantic Times album.

Several of the other skits are also considered to be classics, such as "A Piece Of Pie", and "You Scare The **** Out Of Me", which have occasionally appeared in the troupe's shows after their reunion in 2004 and 2005. The former skit involves a man who confides to his friend that he has just excreted a whole, well-formed piece of pie, and the latter is a self-explanatory song. Neither skit could have been aired on their long-running CBC radio show.

Despite the resemblance, Frantics member Paul Chato claims the person getting his head booted on the cover is not supposed to be him.

References

  1. Clay, Chris (February 26, 2008). "A Frantics approach to comedy". The Mississauga News. Mississauga, Ontario: Ken Nugent. ISSN 0834-6585. OCLC 290997481.
  2. "Comedy Network unveils its fall programming highlights". Channel Canada. Canada: Randi Dertzo, ohn Melville. July 3, 2005. Retrieved 15 February 2011.

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/13/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.