Lock 'N Load

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Lock 'N Load album cover
Album Information
EXPLICIT

Total Tracks: 20   Total Length: 77:56

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Not Leary's best.

Gillium

This is a terrible, terrible album... and this is coming from a fan of Leary. His "No Cure for Cancer" album was wonderful and I expected similar quality in this effort. Unfortunately, where "No Cure" is filled with enduring observations interspersed with a few topical anecdotes, "Lock and Load" is just a series of uninspired rants on topics now outdated; which makes what was a bad album then, an even worse album today because the jokes have aged so poorly. Imagine someone in 2010 cracking a joke involving an Austin Powers reference -- IT'D BE AWFUL! And that's exactly how this entire album feels.

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Brilliantly brutal comedy. Screw the Hicks cult.

DevilsMischief

It's hilarious how idiots like Scottarino and other Bill Hicks fanatics have this compulsion to call all of Denis Leary's works a rip-off of Bill Hicks. And yet on this album, I don't see any subjects that Bill Hicks really did in his routines, except maybe some stuff about the Pope (which is stretching it; dozens of comedians have poked fun at Catholicism). I only wish Leary put out more stand-up material, but it seems he's found a niche in acting.

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See Bill Hicks...

scottarino

..if you care to see from whom Leary lifted his whole persona.

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They Say All Music Guide

No Cure for Cancer captured Denis Leary the phenomenon but Lock ‘n Load captures Denis Leary the comedian, and it’s a record that captures him at his best. Leary’s relentless rants may seem like a gimmick to undiscerning ears, but they tend to obscure a viciously clever satirical wit. Few comedians during the ’90s were as political or accurate as Leary — in fact, his set pieces of the time often seemed more like bitterly funny social comedy than routines. Throughout Lock ‘n Load, he takes on targets ranging from the Catholic Church and politicians to microbrews and Hanson, and mercilessly tears them down with his sharp, profane wit. It’s an excellent display of his powers. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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