No Quarter Pounder


No Quarter Pounder is an album by the American band Dread Zeppelin, released in 1995. Its title is wordplay on the Led Zeppelin song "No Quarter", and the name of a McDonald's hamburger, the Quarter Pounder. The band promoted the album with a North American tour.

Critical reception

The Calgary Herald noted that "once around, it was fun and funny... But after four or five albums it's worn as thin as Tortelvis's Jenny Craig fantasies." The Toronto Star argued that "it's still a good joke, because Tortelvis combines a great voice with a truly warped sense of humor," and considered the album to be better than The Fun Sessions.
The Houston Press wrote: "The idea of a reggae band fronted by an Elvis impersonator performing Led Zeppelin cover tunes should have been, at most, a one-hit novelty. But because Dread Zep told the joke so well, they've endured and won approving nods from even those '70s survivors who thought Zeppelin sucked almost as bad as disco." The St. Louis Post-Dispatch dismissed No Quarter Pounder as "even more lifeless than its inspirations."

Track listing

  1. "Un Leddd Ed " – 1:09
  2. "Ramble On" – 4:01
  3. "Viva Las Vegas" - 3:35
  4. "What Is and What Should Never Be" – 4:58
  5. "Li'l Baby Elvis Jackson" – 3:48
  6. "How Many More Times" – 6:25
  7. "No Quarter" – 4:33
  8. "The Last Resort", from the film National Lampoon's Last Resort – 4:19
  9. "1-800-Psychic Pal" – 1:44
  10. "American Trilogy" – 3:42
  11. "Brick House " – 5:01
  12. "Li'l Baby E.J. Goes to College " – 3:55

Additional notes

Catalogue: Birdcage 11006