Chef Aid: The South Park Album

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (13 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EXPLICIT

Total Tracks: 22   Total Length: 77:48

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Lame.

Davia

I can't believe you can't just pick which songs you want. Come on emusic, what am I paying for?? There are some really awful songs on this album, and I don't want to waste 12 downloads when I really only want 5 songs off of this.

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1/2 OK

lunatic4blues

yeah... as a whole this isn't the greatest compilation. Nowhere to Run, It's a Rockin' World, Love Gravy & Hot Lava are the one's worth downloading.

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classy

Porieux

It would be a real shame if someone was able to download the 40 second long South Park theme for "only" one download credit, eh eMusic? Pathetique. There are some good songs on this album and some really really awful ones. Love Gravy, Hot Lava, and Nowhere to Run are pretty much the best ones. I wouldn't really recommend downloading the whole thing, go to amazon or even iTunes and cherry pick the good tracks if you must, you will pay less and be better off without crap like Horny, which for example has absolutely no redeeming value whatsoever, and Come Sail Away makes its point in 20 seconds but then continues excruciatingly for 5 minutes more (!!!!) Most of the songs are pretty bad, especially the ones from the 'big' names, but as I said there are a few gems. Probably one of the last reviews I will write since I am leaving eMusic due to their disrespect and outright lies/manipulation towards customers.

They Say All Media Guide

This tie-in album to TV’s South Park gang of potty-mouthed cartoon cutups comes from an episode chronicling a benefit concert for resident school cook Chef (voiced by Isaac Hayes). Calling in such pals as Ozzy Osbourne, Wyclef Jean, and Elton John, Chef Aid: The South Park Album is little more than a soundtrack featuring chart-toppers du jour. But most of the guest artists are peripheral to the surroundings (although Master P’s “Kenny’s Dead” is a clever goof incorporating both a running gag of the series and Curtis Mayfield’s “Freddie’s Dead”). The real treats come from the animated characters themselves: Chef gets all funky paying tribute to his “Chocolate Salty Balls,” and several of his lascivious tunes — which originated on the show and are naturally soaked in double entendres — are spread throughout the album. The highlight, however, is resident fatty Eric Cartman’s skewering cover of Styx’s “Come Sail Away.” It not only inflates the original’s bloated pretensions, it also mocks an entire faceless, and creatively infertile, period in music in the process. – Michael Gallucci

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