Happy Town (album)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Happy_Town_(album) an entity of type: Thing

Happy Town is the third album by the American singer-songwriter Jill Sobule, released in 1997. The album contains the singles "Bitter" and "When My Ship Comes In" as well as "Half a Heart" and the satirical social commentary "Soldiers of Christ", where Sobule sings from the point of view of a Christian Conservative to illustrate the existence of homophobia in religion. The album sold 24,000 copies in the US within the first year of its release. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Happy Town (album)
rdf:langString Happy Town
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rdf:langString Jill Sobule - Happy Town.jpg
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rdf:langString Robin Eaton,
xsd:date 1997-03-18
rdf:langString Deseret News
rdf:langString Rolling Stone
rdf:langString MusicHound Rock: The Essential Album Guide
rdf:langString The Encyclopedia of Popular Music
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rdf:langString Happy Town is the third album by the American singer-songwriter Jill Sobule, released in 1997. The album contains the singles "Bitter" and "When My Ship Comes In" as well as "Half a Heart" and the satirical social commentary "Soldiers of Christ", where Sobule sings from the point of view of a Christian Conservative to illustrate the existence of homophobia in religion. The album sold 24,000 copies in the US within the first year of its release. "Bitter" peaked at No. 74 on the Australian ARIA singles chart in June 1997. The album peaked at No. 83 on the Australian ARIA albums chart during the same month. Sobule was dropped by Atlantic after the release of Happy Town. The album cover illustration, which initially featured a Prozac pill, was changed to show a pair of test tubes when Wal-Mart refused to carry the album in its stores. The company asserted that the original image promoted drug abuse.
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