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Off the Deep End

Weird Al Yankovic  Main Performer

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1 Smells Like Nirvana Cobain/Nirvana [US] 3:42
2 Trigger Happy Yankovic 3:46
3 I Can't Watch This Hammer/Miller/James 3:31
4 Polka Your Eyes Out Berry/Mills/Werner/ 3:50
5 I Was Only Kidding Yankovic 3:31
6 The White Stuff Yankovic/Starr 2:43
7 When I Was Your Age Yankovic 4:35
8 Taco Grande Mejia/Warren/Yankov 3:44
9 Airline Amy Yankovic 3:50
10 The Plumbing Song Warren/Nail/Yankovi 4:05
11 You Don't Love Me Anymore Yankovic 4:01
  • Overview
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Off the Deep End

Audio Compact Disc

Label: Scotti Brothers

Category: Pop/Rock

Off the Deep End

UPC: 614223201627

Release Date: 04/14/1992

Original Release Date: 04/14/1992

Number of Discs: 1

Tracks: [Smells Like Nirvana, Trigger Happy, I Can't Watch This, Polka Your Eyes Out, I Was Only Kidding, The White Stuff, When I Was Your Age, Taco Grande, Airline Amy, The Plumbing Song, You Don't Love Me Anymore]
Contributors:

Barry Weber

Following his exposure in the mid-'80s, Weird Al Yankovic's career stumbled with the poor-selling Polka Party in 1986 and his feature film UHF that tanked in 1989. Clearly, many people had grown tired of Yankovic's presence, just as they'd grown tired of the artists he was satirizing. Thus his chance for a comeback came in 1992, when Nirvana stormed the scene with "Smells Like Teen Sprit," a song that turned the music world upside down and ended the careers of many of the artists Yankovic had once used to heighten his success. Not too surprisingly, "Smells Like Nirvana" was the first single off of Off the Deep End, Yankovic's first album in three years. The song, which pokes fun at the original version's incoherent lyrics, was a smash hit, and not undeservingly -- it reveals the kind of brilliant writing Yankovic was still capable of doing. Though no other parody on the album matches the cleverness of "Smells Like Nirvana," satires such as "I Can't Watch This" and "Taco Grande" come quite close. In addition to re-establishing his satirical craftsmanship, Deep End showcases some of Yankovic's best originals ever; "Trigger Happy," "When I Was Your Age," and "You Don't Love Me Anymore" prove to be the album's greatest songs. As his best album since In 3-D, Off the Deep End is the answer to those who questioned Yankovic's credibility as an evolving artist. ~ Barry Weber, Rovi

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