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The 6 Joker Cards

 

The era of the 1st Jokers Card album
Carnival of Carnage: 1992 - 1993

In October of 1992, Insane Clown Posse's first LP, Carnival of Carnage, began the series of six Joker's Card albums that took ten years to complete. Full of violently slapstick lyrics of vigilante- style revenge against those who perpetrate evil in the world, Carnival of Carnage fully established ICP's look and musical style. With live shows also came new innovations, namely their trademark use of Faygo soda, which the group began dousing crowds with.

Working closely with their self-owned label, Psychopathic Records, ICP was quickly becoming a cult sensation in Detroit. Many were receiving the message locally, but it was time to expand into the national scene.

 

 

 

Carnival of Carnage

 

 

 

 

 

The era of the 2nd Jokers Card album
The Ringmaster: 1994 - 1995

1994 saw the release of the second Joker's Card album, Ringmaster. Fans were more than ready, and record sales reflected this. Strong sales caught the attention of local Detroit music leaders, and helped establish ICP as a group that was on the rise. By now, ICP had fully converted to professional musicians backed by a small but growing Psychopathic Records team. The face paint, the Faygo throwing, and the hard-core, carnival-inspired musical style were quickly becoming the group's unmistakable trademark.

A local hit radio single lead to growing recognition in Detroit and throughout the Midwest. Insane Clown Posse was entering the radar of national labels. Meanwhile, Psychopathic Records was itself growing into an established company, branching out into peripheral ICP merchandising as well.

 

 

Ringmaster

 

 

 

 

The era of the 3rd Jokers Card album
The Riddle Box: 1995 - 1996

With over 100,000 records sold in the Midwest, Insane Clown Posse and Psychopathic Records looked towards the large record labels to further promote the group and its message. They signed with New York based Jive Records, who released The Riddle Box, the third Joker's Card album, in 1995. While Psychopathic Records promoted the album in Detroit, Dallas, and elsewhere, Jive did relatively little. Psychopathic Records sent out street teams, covering the country coast-to-coast, city-by-city, without the benefit of radio support. From the ground up, these teams of vans laid the foundation of what would later become an underground nation of fans, called Juggalos.

Despite the lack of mainstream support, this was an exciting time in the lives and careers of Insane Clown Posse and the people behind Psychopathic Records. Two videos for a hit single were shot. ICP's cult following was growing into a nation-wide phenomenon, as the band broke ground in the underground.

 

 

Riddlebox

 

 

 

 

 

 

The era of the 4th Jokers Card album
The Great Milenko: 1997 - 1998

As their underground popularity grew, other records labels began to take interest in Insane Clown Posse. Moving from Jive, ICP signed a million-dollar contract with Disney's Hollywood Records to release the fourth Joker's Card album, The Great Milenko, in 1997. In a catastrophe turned blessing, it was pulled from the shelves six hours after dropping because of pressure from The Southern Baptist Federation.

Far from silencing ICP, this action had the opposite effect, pole-vaulting the wicked clown duo into a media frenzy, feeding on the "bad" publicity. This sparked a bidding war between major labels, bringing ICP and The Great Milenko (with new tracks and fully uncensored) to Polygram-owned Island Records. The Island team had what Psychopathic Records and ICP were looking for all along: the heart and dedication needed to truly promote their album, their musical style, and their message. The Great Milenko went on to be certified platinum, sound scanning 1.4 million, and is currently a record holder for one of the longest running albums in Billboard Top 200 history.

The Great Milenko's success brought Insane Clown Posse to a new level. Not only were they reaching a nation-wide audience, but they began touring in Europe, where they met unexpected acceptance. Aside from touring, Violent J and Shaggy themselves delved into the world of wrestling, where they joined the World Wrestling Federation (WWF), then moved to World Championship Wrestling (WCW) as well as Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW).

 

 

 

 

 

 

The era of the 5th Jokers Card album
The Amazing Jeckel Brothers: 1999 - 2001

Riding a tidal wave of publicity and fan support, Insane Clown Posse prepared to release their fifth Joker's Card album in June 1999. The Amazing Jeckel Brothers debuted at #4 on the Billboard Charts, just behind The Backstreet Boys. Considering the lack of radio/MTV play and media support, this was a major achievement, and one that did not go unnoticed in the music industry. The Amazing Jeckel Brothers was quickly certified platinum.

1999 and 2000 saw Insane Clown Posse touring throughout the county, both in larger arenas, including an appearance at Woodstock Music Festival, and covering lesser markets at small venues. ICP also appeared on the cover of several magazines, including Alternative Press, with that issue going on to break all AP sales records. They released a successful comic book series through Chaos! Comics. ICP even started an independent wrestling promotion called Juggalo Championship Wrestling (JCW), which went on to become the second highest grossing promotion in the U.S.

As the turn of the millennium approached, Insane Clown Posse's vision only became larger and clearer. Juggling music and wrestling, ICP also advanced their film interests. They released a full-length motion picture called Big Money Hustlas, featuring appearances by such notables as Rudy Ray Moore (Dolomite), The Jerky Boys, Harland Williams, WWF's Mankind, Fred "Rerun" Barry, The Misfits, etc.

Insane Clown Posse and Psychopathic Records made significant and groundbreaking expansions during this time, all setting the stage for the long-awaited sixth and final Joker's Card album. Only with such a far-reaching and diverse foundation, could the sixth and final Joker's Card become what it had always been envisioned and planned to be. The only ones more excited at the start of this new era than the masses of Juggalos are Insane Clown Posse themselves and the people behind them at Psychopathic Records. Ten years of tireless dedication is coming to a head, right now.

 

 

 

 

Jack JeckelJake Jeckel

 

 

 

 

The Era of the Sixth and Final Jokers Card Album
The Wraith: Shangri-La

November 5th, 2002, will spark the most important era in Insane Clown Posse history. The release of the sixth and final Joker's Card album, The Wraith: Shangri- La, could not be more anticipated by fans worldwide. Whether followers of the music and message from day one, or introduced to it during The Great Milenko era, all eyes and ears have been waiting for this album for quite some time.

The Wraith: Shangri-La will shock the mainstream to its foundations, going far further than anything Insane Clown Posse ever previously imagined. It is a breakthrough album that not only appeals to Juggalos, but contains messages for the entire world as well. Supported by a highly trained mobile fleet of nationwide promotional teams already on the move, The Wraith will be Insane Clown Posse's most successful album of all time. ICP's biggest tour ever, set to blaze a trail across the U.S., Europe, Australia, and Japan starting early in 2003, will catapult this album over everything that has gone before.

Psychopathic Records has weathered many storms and overcome nearly every obstacle imaginable on its mission to promote Insane Clown Posse, and is poised to push even harder to make the sixth and final Joker's Card album everything it was always meant and imagined to be. Insane Clown Posse themselves have made major changes in preparation for the new era. For the first time in their careers they have changed their style of face paint. Now, instead of black and white in fixed pattern, colors change within a black outline to match the mood, hair, and clothing of the duo. More changes will mark this chaotic and volatile era as it unfolds.

More important than appearance