Alpocalypse

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (44 ratings)
Alpocalypse album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Weird Al Yankovic (See All Albums by Weird Al Yankovic)
  • Date Released: Jun 21, 2011

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Rock, Comedy

  • Label: Volcano

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 46:41

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Awesomesauce

Dave_man

Weird Al hasn't disappointed since he first did "Another One Rides the Bus". Keep supporting him!

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Awesomesauce

Dave_man

Weird Al hasn't disappointed since he first did "Another One Rides the Bus". Keep supporting him!

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Excellent

sainttardamus

TMZ is one of his best parodies ever. TMZ should adopt this as their TV show theme song.

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balls out

ernie-c

bring on the grammy.

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eMusic Features

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How Weird Al Predicted The Future

By Christopher R. Weingarten, eMusic Contributor

The best "Weird Al" Yankovic albums work like a musical version of Mad magazine - they lampoon the times, but also capture their essence. His second and best, In 3-D, doubles as a yearbook of 1983's junk culture - tabloids, game shows, reruns, infomercials, slasher flicks, mini-malls, breakfast cereals. Ignoring the looming shadows of nuclear and economic anxiety, Yankovic boils American life down to our guiltiest pleasures and lowest-brow distractions, a point no doubt driven… more »

They Say All Music Guide

From its smattering of cute original songs to its wealth of brilliant parodies, Weird Al’s Alpocalypse fits the Yankovic album template splendidly, offering a great gut busters-to-groaners ratio, and featuring one of the best pop-in-a-polka-style medleys in the man’s catalog, “Polka Face.” The inspired medley covers everyone from Kesha (“Tik Tok”) to Owl City (“Fireflies”) at breakneck speed, but the highlight has to be Al’s take on Kid Cudi (“Day ‘N’ Nite”) where backpacker lyrics (“The lonely stoner seems to free himself at night”) meets babushka music. “Party in the C.I.A.” takes a Miley Cyrus cut and turns it into a glittery covert operations party (“Payin’ the bribes like yeah/Pluggin’ the leaks like yeah”) while “Whatever You Like” is the T.I. track of the same name but on food stamps, promising the ladies any flavor of Top Ramen they crave. The creative high point is “CNR,” which has to be the only White Stripes-influenced, Charles Nelson Reilly S&M song in the known universe, and if you’ve ever sold any unwanted crap online, “Craigslist” will be a close second. Only bummer for loyal fans is that five of these tracks are repeated from the Internet Leaks EP, but ignore that redundancy, and Al remains the undisputed king of the parody song. – David Jeffries

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