Radio Dinner | ||||
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Studio album by National Lampoon | ||||
Released | July 1972 | |||
Genre | Comedy, parody, rock, folk rock | |||
Label | Blue Thumb, MCA | |||
Producer | Tony Hendra, Michael O'Donoghue, Bob Tischler | |||
National Lampoon chronology | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | |
Newsday | A– |
National Lampoon Radio Dinner is a comedy album from National Lampoon that was first released in 1972. The humor on the album was very much steeped in the pop culture of the era and includes such subjects as game shows ("Catch It and You Keep It"), the 1972 presidential election ("Profiles in Chrome" - where the Democrats nominate a Pontiac GTO to run for office while then-president Richard Nixon counters by transforming into a car himself) and popular music parodies such as "Deteriorata" (a parody of Les Crane's "Desiderata"), - and "Pull the Tregros", a parody of Joan Baez.
The latter subject also includes several references and sketches about the solo careers of the former members of The Beatles. These include "Teenyrap" (two teenagers discussing George Harrison's Concert For Bangladesh), references to Paul McCartney's single "Give Ireland Back To The Irish" (where an Irish tenor begins to sing the song and is repeatedly shot), the "Paul is Dead" hoax, "Magical Misery Tour (Bootleg Record)" - a John Lennon parody of the personal songwriting found on the John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band album (the lyrics were lifted from his famous 1970 Rolling Stone interview). Melissa Manchester made a brief speaking appearance as "Yoko Ono" on the track.