Linger Ficken' Good

Linger Ficken' Good
Studio album by Revolting Cocks
Released September 28, 1993
Recorded 1990, 1993 in Chicago, Illinois
Genre Industrial rock
Length 64:34
Label Sire/Reprise/Warner Bros.
45407
Producer Revolting Cocks
Revolting Cocks chronology
Beers, Steers, and Queers
(1990)
Linger Ficken' Good
(1993)
Cocked and Loaded
(2006)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Linger Ficken' Good…and Other Barnyard Oddities is the third studio album by Revolting Cocks. The title is a satirical Spoonerism of the advertising slogan employed by KFC in the 1970s—"Finger Lickin' Good."

Videos were made for two singles, the first of which was the cover of "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" which featured Chris Connelly prominently, interacting with the patrons of a sleazy strip club, including Jewel Shepard and Linnea Quigley, and being horrified when the club switches into a nightmarish environment (exterior shots were filmed in front of the Ridglea Theater in Fort Worth, Texas). The second video was for "Crackin' Up," which was played on an episode of Beavis & Butthead.

Track listing

All tracks by Revolting Cocks unless noted.

No. Title Length
1. "Gila Copter"   5:58
2. "Creep"   8:50
3. "Mr. Lucky"   4:39
4. "Crackin' Up"   6:26
5. "Sergio"   6:32
6. "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?" (Rod Stewart, Carmine Appice, Duane Hitchings) 5:34
7. "The Rockabye"   7:19
8. "Butcher Flower's Woman"   4:57
9. "Dirt"   5:07
10. "Linger Ficken' Good"   9:12
Total length:
64:34

Singles

Da Ya Think I'm Sexy? (1993)

  1. "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?"
  2. "Sergio Guitar" (Alternate Version Of "Sergio")
  3. "Wrong Sexy Mix" (Alternate Version Of "The Rockabye")

Crackin' Up (1994)

  1. "Crackin' Up [Video Edit]"
  2. "Crackin' Up [Amyl Nitrate Mix]"
  3. "Gila Copter [Version 2]"

Personnel

Revolting Cocks

Revolving Cocks

Revolting Pussies

Additional personnel

Samples

Taken from the movie Dirty Harry, when Harry encounters a bunch of would-be muggers in a tunnel, used in "Crackin' Up"

Quotes from the movie are very heavily sampled in "Crackin' Up."

Taken from the movie Silence Of The Lambs, in the segment when the mother of the kidnapped girl addresses the kidnapper on television, pleading him to free her daughter.

References

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