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Big Bambu

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This is the current revision of this page, as edited by 2603:8000:cff0:8620:b5e8:2198:733d:c90d (talk) at 07:42, 4 April 2024. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.

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Big Bambú is also a work of art by the lettering artist, Walter Velez.
Big Bambú
Studio album by
ReleasedJune 1972
GenreComedy
Length34:14
LabelOde Records/Warner Bros. Records / WEA
ProducerLou Adler
Cheech & Chong chronology
Cheech and Chong
(1971)
Big Bambú
(1972)
Los Cochinos
(1973)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

Big Bambú is the second album by Cheech & Chong, released in 1972. The name Big Bambu is a reference to the actual Bambu brand of rolling paper. The original LP concept and album package was approved by the producer Lou Adler and designed by Ron Larson and manufactured by Sound Packaging Corp. to look like a giant rolling paper package, and contained a giant rolling paper with the record. Vinyl copies with the rolling paper have become collectible and hard to find. The original CD packaging has been slightly reformatted, and does not contain rolling papers.

In generally positive review published in Rolling Stone, Janet Maslin singled out the duo's voice work for particular praise. "The thing Cheech and Chong are great with is voices. Each has terrific ears for dialect, anything from spare change wino to jiveass soul, and there are at least 20 distinct personae showing up here, all of them cleverly done."[2]

The album was nominated for Best Comedy Recording at the 15th Grammy Awards, but lost to George Carlin's FM & AM.[3]

Track listing

[edit]
Side one
No.TitleLength
1."Sister Mary Elephant"3:38
2."Ralph and Herbie"3:24
3."Streets of New York or Los Angeles or San Francisco or..."2:34
4."Rebuttal: Speaker Ashley Roachclip"1:56
5."The Continuing Adventures of Pedro de Pacas and Man"6:22
Side two
No.TitleLength
1."The Bust"2:02
2."Television Medley
  • a) Tortured Old Man
  • b) Empire Hancock
  • c) Let's Make a Dope Deal
  • d) Unamerican Bandstand"
14:18

3:08 1:08 3:57

6:05

References

[edit]
  1. ^ AllMusic review
  2. ^ Maslin, Janet (August 17, 1972). "Big Bambu". Rolling Stone. No. 115. Straight Arrow Publishers, Inc. pp. 54, 56.
  3. ^ "Grammy Award Nominees 1973 – Grammy Award Winners 1973". Awardsandshows.com. Retrieved 11 August 2019.