Led by the obnoxious and proud
Jimmy Pop,
the Bloodhound Gang are an alternative rock band out of King of Prussia, PA, who rose to fame in the late '90s thanks to lyrics filled with sexual innuendo and sophomoric humor. Formed by
Pop and friend
Daddy Long Legs in 1992, the group was first called
Bang Chamber 8 before they lifted the name
the Bloodhound Gang from the '70s children's public television show 3-2-1 Contact. Calling
Howard Stern a key influence,
Pop designed the band to "hurt everyone's feelings; it makes us feel better about ourselves." Naming one of the group's early demo tapes The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack to Hitler's Handicapped Helpers proved they meant it, but the Universal-associated label Cheese Factory Records shared
the Gang's sense of humor and released their debut EP,
Dingleberry Haze, in 1994.
Many of the EP's tracks would land again on the 1995 album
Use Your Fingers, the group's first and only release for Columbia, a label
Pop felt never quite "got" the band. Split between
Red Hot Chili Peppers-influenced funk-rock and
Beastie Boys-influenced rap-rock, the album featured an intro from flamboyant comedian Rip Taylor and a loud cover version of
Kim Wilde's '80s anthem "Kids in America," plus the minor hit "Mama Say." Columbia dropped the band and
Daddy Long Legs left soon after to form
Wolfpac, so
Pop hired replacements and took the band back to the Cheese Factory label for its 1996 album,
One Fierce Beer Coaster. Geffen reissued the album just months later and helped push the single "Fire Water Burn" up Billboard's Modern Rock Tracks chart, where it peaked at number 18. Not the most impressive number, but the track "had legs" and remained an in-print single in the United States for the next two years. In 1998 their cover version of
the Association's hit "Along Comes Mary" kicked off the soundtrack to the stoner comedy Half-Baked.
Building on this momentum, their 2000 album
Hooray for Boobies was their true breakthrough. Titled just
Hooray on the clean version, the album featured "The Bad Touch," an infectious dance-pop number with the chorus "You and me baby ain't nuthin' but mammals/So let's do it like they do on the Discovery Channel." The international hit was followed by the ode to a porn star "The Ballad of Chasey Lain" along with the "Rock Me Amadeus"-sampling single "Mope." With plenty of time devoted to touring Europe, where they were drawing huge audiences, their next album,
Hefty Fine, didn't appear until 2005. The album was promoted by the singles "Foxtrot Uniform Charlie Kilo" and "Uhn Tiss Uhn Tiss Uhn Tiss," the latter of which would be remixed by "stadium techno" powerhouse
Scooter. ~ David Jeffries, All Music Guide