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What is it about Detroit that produces such patently inflammatory, yet platinum-popular rockers and rappers? In the grand tradition of their Motor Town forerockers Ted Nugent and the MC5 -- not to mention their Rock City rivals Eminem and Kid Rock -- Insane Clown Posse offer their own outrageous metal-charged rap vision, complete with sexism, unfathomable sexual practices, and boasts that stray from typical rap clichés like women and money. On Halloween 2000, the band released Bizaar and Bizzar -- two distinct CDs, sold separately, that each include packaging perks for ICP fans (Juggalos). Bizzar's CD booklet includes a Bizzar word search, maze and a graphically violent crossword puzzle. The album opens with a dramatic, newscast-styled homage to the Dark Carnival, the deity that ICP say direct their energies, before unfolding into the sort of simplistic-but-catchy beats and scatological, violent, and humorous rhymes they are known for. "Mr. Happy" is a glib ode to murder ("I don't use a chainsaw or a butcher knife / That's so '90s. Get it right"), and "Radio Stars" lashes out at all the underground bands that compromise to become stars. The pièce de résistance is their remake of Sly Fox's '80s hit, "Let's Go All the Way" -- now that's shock value everyone can appreciate. Bill Werde, Barnes & Noble