Fuck You and Then Some
File:Overkill FU and then.jpg
Compilation album by Overkill
Released 1996
Recorded June 3, 1987, January 27, 1990
Genre Thrash metal
Length 58:31
Label Megaforce Records
Overkill chronology
The Killing Kind
(1996)
!!!Fuck You!!! and Then Some
(1996)
From the Underground and Below
(1997)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 2.5/5 stars link

Fuck You and Then Some (stylized as ''!!!Fuck You!!! and Then Some) is a 1996 reissue of the Overkill EPs Overkill (1984) and !!!Fuck You!!! (1987), combined with bonus live tracks, including a cover of Black Sabbath's "Hole in the Sky." The cover of this compilation album is the same as !!!Fuck You!!!, although the cover of that EP does not feature the words "and Then Some".

Track listing [link]

  1. "Fuck You" (studio) – 2:20
  2. "Rotten to the Core" (live) – 6:41
  3. "Hammerhead" (live) – 3:57
  4. "Use Your Head" (live) – 5:18
  5. "Electro-Violence" (live) – 3:50
  6. "Fuck You" (live) – 2:28
  7. "Hole in the Sky" (live) (Black Sabbath cover) – 3:42
  8. "E.vil N.ever D.ies" (live) – 6:11
  9. "Rotten to the Core" – 5:14
  10. "Fatal If Swallowed" – 6:20
  11. "The Answer" – 8:49
  12. "Overkill" – 3:41

Personnel [link]

External links [link]



https://wn.com/Fuck_You_and_Then_Some

Fuck You

Fuck You may refer to:

Music

  • Fuck You (EP), a 1987 thrash metal EP by Overkill
  • "Fuck You" (CeeLo Green song)
  • "Fuck You" (Lily Allen song)
  • "Fuck You", a song by Dr. Dre on 2001
  • "Fuck You", a 2004 metal song by Damageplan on New Found Power
  • "Fuck You", a 2006 R&B single by Anna David
  • "Fuck You", a 2012 punk rock single by Bad Religion
  • "Fuck You", a 2011 comedy-folk song by Garfunkel and Oates
  • "Fuck You", a song by Subhumans
  • Other uses

  • A form of the profanity "Fuck"
  • Fuck You (magazine), a literary periodical
  • The finger, a gesture with that name
  • See also

  • Fuck (word)
  • Fuck It (disambiguation)
  • Fuck off (disambiguation)
  • Pharoahe Monch

    Troy Donald Jamerson (born October 31, 1972), better known by his stage name Pharoahe Monch, is an American rapper from Queens, New York City. He is known for his complex lyrics, complex delivery, and internal and multisyllabic rhyme schemes.

    Biography

    Pharoahe Monch's name is derived from the monkey doll Monchhichi. After receiving a bad haircut, which left Monch looking like a "chimpanzee", girls in Monch's class at the High School of Art and Design began calling him "Monchhichi", which was later shortened to "Monch". Monch adopted the "Pharoahe" prefix after meeting future Organized Konfusion partner Prince Po.

    Monch released three albums as part of the rap duo Organized Konfusion with partner Prince Poetry: The self-titled Organized Konfusion, Stress: The Extinction Agenda and The Equinox. The duo handled a large amount of production on these albums themselves. All albums received positive critical reviews, but moderate sales. As a result, the duo split up after recording their final album The Equinox in 1997. Prince Poetry has since denied the possibility of an Organized Konfusion reunion.

    Fuck You (magazine)

    Fuck You: A Magazine of the Arts was a literary magazine founded in 1962 by the poet Ed Sanders on the Lower East Side of New York City. Sanders later co-founded the musical group The Fugs. Sanders produced thirteen issues of Fuck You: A Magazine of the Arts from 1962 to 1965.

    The credo for the magazine, originated by Sanders, was I'll print anything. Its first issue contained the following dedication: "Dedicated to Pacifism, Unilateral Disarmament, National Defense thru Nonviolent Resistence [sic], Multilateral Indiscriminate Apertural Conjugation, Anarchism, World Federalism, Civil Disobedience, Obstructers & Submarine Boarders, and All Those Groped by J. Edgar Hoover in the Silent Halls of Congress."

    Fuck You: A Magazine of the Arts was produced on a mimeograph machine and printed on multi-colored construction paper.

    Legacy

    Fuck You: A Magazine of the Arts was a core publication in the movement known as the Mimeo Revolution. It was dedicated to free expression, and especially defying the taboos around sex and drugs, advocating free love promiscuity and the use of psychedelics long before those were picked up by the more widespread countercultural movements of the late Sixties. Ed Sanders and his collaborators served as a bridge between the Beat generation of the Fifties and the later Hippie counterculture of the mid Sixties.

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