Nevel silences him and magnetically seals on the head so Freddie cannot take off the costume. He calls Carly and informs her it was Nevel, but Nevel's bodyguards Demetri and E-von force Freddie into the robot costume. Freddie successfully finds Nevel in the iCarly studio. Because of this, they angrily split up to find out who the purple robot is. Once Nevel finds out, he dresses as a purple robot and give the "iCarlys" candy, which makes their voices deeper and freaks out many people. They decide to celebrate it halfway through the year as well creating a new holiday termed 'Halfoween' and have a party. Retrieved July 30, 2020.' iHalfoween' is the second Halloween episode of Nickelodeon's sitcom iCarly, produced as the fourth episode of its sixth and final season.Ĭarly, Sam, and Freddie wonder why can't you celebrate Halloween more than once a year. The New Rolling Stone Album Guide (4th ed.). In Brackett, Nathan Hoard, Christian (eds.). MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide (1st ed.). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music (5th concise ed.). Christgau's Consumer Guide: Albums of the '90s. ^ "In Praise Of Ween's "Poop Ship Destroyer," a/k/a The Penalty Song".Stephan Said – additional instrumentation.Larry Curtin – vocals (bkgr), whistle (Human).Guy Heller – vocals on "Flies On My Dick".Not least because it was recorded in the same exact conditions and from the same exact sessions as most of said earlier indie career, so that means that Ween hit the big time with a record compiled from the outtakes that weren't good enough for their previous album, and it's still one of the best records ever made." The same year, German magazine Spex included the album on their list of the 100 best albums of the 20th century.
In 1999, Ned Raggett - writing for the website Freaky Trigger - named Pure Guava the 53rd best album of the 90s, hailing it as "the greatest 'major label debut after an indie career' record of the decade.
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Reception and legacy Professional ratings Review scoresĪllMusic editor Heather Phares called the album "more polished and concise" than their previous albums The Pod and GodWeenSatan: The Oneness and stated that "Considering Elektra released it, it's just as uncompromising as their previous work, but it hints at just how much further they could go with their music." Bill Wyman in Entertainment Weekly gave it a B+, noting that it was, "Very, very weird, but I can't stop playing Ween's Pure Guava." The song "Poop Ship Destroyer" would become a live staple for the band, although the live performances traditionally bear little resemblance to the album version and are instead played as a protracted improvised jam, either to punish or reward an audience. Lemons, who worked at the dealership owned by Dean Ween's father. The song "Big Jilm" was inspired by a car dealer named James A. Many of the songs on this album come from two tapes that the band made for friends, the first being titled "Springtape", and the second titled "The Caprice Classic Tape", as stated by Dean Ween on JJJ radio in 1993. "Push th' Little Daisies" was also released as a single on August Records in 1993, including both the album and radio edit versions of the song (the latter replacing the word "shit" with a sample of Prince squealing from " Alphabet St.") and the tracks "Ode to Rene", "I Smoke Some Grass (Really Really High)" and "Mango Woman".
The album features what is perhaps Ween's most well-known song, " Push th' Little Daisies".