From Hamhock:
For those not yet familiar with the Frogs, this is a good place to  begin. The same geniuses that created the cult hit "Grandma Sitting in  the Corner with a Penis in Her Hand Going No, No, No" turn their  attentions to the history of racial tension in the United States.  Highlights include "Darkmeat 4 Sale" ("There's a fork around my  neck/Forks are for food/It was only a joke/to lighten the mood"),  "Massa" ("Massa Massa/I ain't your friend/I ain't your fool no more"),  and "Whitefully Dead" ("Now that the white man's dead and gone/ we can  sing a happy song"). This could be pretty offensive...if you are an  idiot.
From Wikipedia:
Racially Yours is an album recorded by the band The Frogs. The album was originally presented to Homestead Records in 1991, but they refused to release it because of its controversial subject matter.  At this point the album only consisted of the first 12 songs. After  much delay, it was released in 2000 on Four Alarm Records with an  additional 13 tracks, and a tongue-in-cheek sticker proclaiming it "the  most controversial album of all time".
Unlike the sexually-charged and comedic material on It's Only Right and Natural and My Daughter the Broad, Racially Yours focuses on subjects such as American racism, genocide and patriotism. The songs are sung from the point of view of both African Americans and white Americans, and the lyrics are equally serious as they are satirical.  In the song "Blackman, Blackman", Dennis quips, "a black man's heaven  is a white man's hell". In "The Flag", Jimmy urges, "brother, let's make  the flag red, white and black".
The Frogs - Racially Yours
