Richard Pryor Comedy Albums Download
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Nov 30, 2015 Richard Pryor Just in time for what would’ve been his 75th birthday, all of Richard Pryor ’s classic comedy albums for Warner Bros. Records have been released digitally for the first time. Bicentennial Nigger is the sixth album by the American comedian Richard Pryor. It won the 1977 Grammy Award for Best Comedy Album. The album was recorded in July 1976 at the Roxy Theatre in West Hollywood, with the exception of the. Download RICHARD PRYOR music for free. #1 rated music site. 6.5 Million songs. Get lyrics ♫ music videos for your iPhone®. Music Downloads. Search and download from over 6 million songs, music videos and lyrics. Largest collection of free music. All songs are in the MP3 format and can be played on any computer or on any MP3 Player.
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Nigger WIth A Seizure - Remastered Version
18 listeners
Latest release
Wanted/Richard Pryor - Live In Concert [Explicit]
17 tracks
Peoria, Peoria County, Illinois, United States (1940 – 2005)
Richard Franklin Lennox Thomas Pryor III (December 1, 1940 – December 10, 2005) was an American comedian, actor, and writer.
Pryor was a storyteller known for unflinching examinations of racism and customs in modern life, and was well-known for his frequent use of colorful language, vulgarities, and racial epithets as 'nigga', 'honky,' 'cracker,' and 'motherfucker.' He reached a broad audience with his trenchant observations, although public opinion of his act was often divided. He is commonly regarded as… read more
Top Tracks
Rank | Play | Loved | Track name | Buy | Options | Listeners |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Nigger WIth A Seizure - Remastered Version | 18 listeners | ||||
2 | I Hope I'm Funny - Remastered | 12 listeners | ||||
3 | Niggers vs. The Police - Remastered Version | 11 listeners | ||||
4 | Flying Saucers - Remastered | 11 listeners | ||||
5 | Have Your Ass Home By 11:00 - Remastered Version | 10 listeners | ||||
6 | Emerald City Sequence | 9 listeners | ||||
7 | Wino Dealing With Dracula - Remastered Version | 9 listeners | ||||
8 | Exorcist - Remastered Version | 8 listeners | ||||
9 | Black & White Life Styles - Remastered Version | 8 listeners | ||||
10 | Wino & Junkie - Remastered Version | 8 listeners |
Top Albums
37,539 listeners
18,955 listeners
14,793 listeners
12,638 listeners
12,179 listeners
8,208 listeners
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Comedy is pain plus time. And good gracious did Richard Pryor show the world so much of both.
With a boxer-turned-father-turned-pimp-to-his-mother and the reported experience of walking in on his mother with the white mayor of Peoria, Illinois, Pryor could only have been funny and been funny about race. But he was so much more.
When Pryor died in 2005, comic star Lily Tomlin spoke in Entertainment Weekly about her friend: “The last time I saw Richard, I was in the audience at the Santa Barbara film festival honoring him for his work. For almost two hours, I watched the greatest pioneering comic artist of the last three generations at the top of his genius — this gifted, raging, soaring, plummeting, deeply human man with the tender boy inside.”
Richard Franklin Lennox Thomas Pryor III was a star of any arena he entered, all while being a black man — not one in a dress, one in a rage.
Sure, there are the films that Pryor and fellow comedy juggernaut Gene Wilder did together like “Silver Streak,” “Stir Crazy” and “See No Evil, Hear No Evil.” But then there are the straighter roles, which were often more black-focused roles.
Pryor portrayed NASCAR’s first black champion, Wendell Scott, in “Greased Lightning.” And he was The Wiz in “The Wiz,” which had an all-black cast that included Diana Ross and Michael Jackson, retelling the story of “The Wizard of Oz.”
And then he reinvented the way people stand at a microphone and make audiences laugh.
Confessional and raw, Pryor’s routines knew no bounds. Lenny Bruce courageously used comedy to defy arcane obscenity laws, but he did it as a white guy.
Because people seem to hold only one archetype for a person of color in their head at a time, Pryor was compared to America’s silly — and since disgraced — dad Bill Cosby. And Pryor could be goofy, like when musing about a wino interacting with Dracula, but he also drew opinions from his friend Huey P. Newton, head of the Black Panther party.
And so Pryor gave the world comedy reality as they had never seen before; ever self-reflective, he held a mirror to society on issues of race.
In his language, Pryor would refer to women with derogatory terms, and he would also freely use the n-word in an effort to take the “sting” out of the term.
But in 1979, he went to Kenya.
After touring Kenya’s national museum, according to The New York Times, he was in a hotel lobby and he realized something.
“There are no (n-words) here. … The people here, they still have their self-respect, their pride.”
He discussed the epiphany in a special later that year.
“To this day, I wish I’d never said the word. I felt its lameness. It was misunderstood by people. They didn’t get what I was talking about. Neither did I,” according to the book “Richard Pryor: The Life and Legacy of a ‘Crazy’ Black Man.”
He vowed not to use the word again.
RELATED: When Pryor abandoned the N-word
RELATED: Richard Pryor’s iconic Saturday Night Live skit
For a man known for so much, Pryor is maybe best known for one day in 1980, when in a drug-induced haze he poured 151-proof rum all over his body and lit himself on fire while freebasing cocaine.
He then ran ablaze down the California neighborhood street and was hospitalized for weeks before crafting a routine about the incident, creating one of the most hysterically despairing comedy bits ever.
It was included on one of the best-regarded comedy recordings ever with “Richard Pryor: Live on the Sunset Strip” in 1982.
Richard Pryor Comedy Specials
“I fell in love with this pipe. This pipe controlled my very being,” he said.
The album represents one of his five Grammy wins, according to the Recording Academy. (Pryor also was posthumously awarded a Lifetime Achievement Grammy.)
He went on in 1983 to become the highest-paid African-American actor in Hollywood when he earned $4 million for his role in “Superman III,” reported NPR.
As evidenced by his drug use, the success and money didn’t help calm the demons, which could also be seen with Pryor being wretched and physically abusing women.

He later admitted on air to Barbara Walters, as retold in a GQ story, that he had beaten women, including some of his seven wives.
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“They pissed me off. I’m sorry to say that. I know emotionally inside of me, because I was weak. That’s really the reason. I was weak.”
In 1986, he was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis, a disease that attacks the central nervous system. He continued performing, making “See No Evil, Hear No Evil” with Wilder in 1989.
He died in December 2005 at a Los Angeles hospital.
Even with his flaws, it’s a shame Pryor isn’t here to join in on the continuing debate of issues with black America decades after he first broached them on stage.
“I went to Zimbabwe. I know how white people feel in America now: Relaxed! Cause when I heard the police car I knew they weren’t coming after me!”
BLACK HISTORY MONTH
Richard Pryor Comedy Show
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