Smoke Two Joints

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"Smoke Two Joints"
Song by The Toyes
Released1983
GenreReggae
Songwriter(s)Chris Kay, Michael Kay

"Smoke Two Joints" is a song originally written by

banyan tree on Kuhio Beach,[1]
"tokin' on some sweet bud & jammin' on a rootsy reggae funky town" when they conceived the song "Smoke Two Joints."

It was featured on the soundtrack for the 1998 American comedy-thriller film

NARC. The song is often mistakenly attributed to Bob Marley
on the internet and file sharing websites. Marley had been dead two years when this song was written.

Nardini version

Norman Nardini, based in

45 as part of the music he had bought during a vacation in Hawaii. Nardini had his band learn it at once and has been performing the song for over twenty years. He wanted to air a cover version on CBS in the 1980s, but the label could not track down the original writers.[citation needed
]

Sublime version

The

Just Ice. Bert Susanka, the lead singer of The Ziggens (a major influence on Sublime), is also sampled saying, "Smoked cigarettes 'til the day she died!" The track is also featured on the 2003 film Grind and is on the Grind motion picture soundtrack as a somewhat shorter version. The track is also used in the film Mallrats when the contestants for a game show are passed out on the floor after being given marijuana by Jay and Silent Bob
.

"Smoke Two Joints" was released in 1994.

Sublime's version is featured in the Rocksmith 2014 video game as a DLC track.

Other versions

  • Tuxicity
    .
  • The
    Cheech and Chong
    movie.
  • German band Ohrbooten covered it in German.
  • German rapper Timi Hendrix covered it in German.
  • Australian comedian, radio, and television presenter Doug Mulray created a cover version with The Rude band in 1986
  • South Park Mexican created a cover version which can be found on The Purity Album.
  • Afroman did a parody of the song called Smoke 2 Blunts
  • Macy Gray released a cover of this song on her 2012 album Covered.[4][5]
  • Insanity Alert released a cover of this song on their 2019 album "666-Pack". This thrash metal crossover cover is the 13th Track called "Two Joints".

References

  1. ^ "Smoke Two Joints". www.thetoyes.com. 2011. Archived from the original on 6 February 2011. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  2. ^ "The SoundtrackInfoProject: Homegrown (1998)".
  3. ^ Grim, Ryan (2009). This Is Your Country on Drugs: The Secret History of Getting High in America'. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. p. 99.
  4. ^ Partridge, Kenneth. "Macy Gray 'Smoke Two Joints' Video: Singer Throws Reggae Dance Party". AOL. Retrieved 2 April 2012.
  5. YouTube

External links