Showing posts with label Snoop Doggy Dogg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Snoop Doggy Dogg. Show all posts

Friday, January 14, 2022

Dr. Dre - Poppa's Got A Brand New Funk - The Chronic II (1996)

Following the release the Dr. Dre's 'The Chronic' album in 1992, he swiftly became one of the best-selling American artists of 1993, and so he could pretty much do what he liked without having to worry about the commercial consequences. This included producing Snoop Doggy Dogg's debut album 'Doggystyle' in 1993, and then directing the 1994 short film 'Murder Was The Case', in which Dogg acted and Dre wrote the soundtrack. The same year he announced that he was working with Ice Cube on an album to be called 'Helter Skelter', although that has yet to appear, but by 1995/1996 he was ready to release the follow-up to 'The Chronic'. However, in March 1996, just before the album was due to be issued, he left Death Row Records due to incessant infighting, and he formed his own label Aftermath Records, and 'The Chronic II: A New World Odor (Popps'a Got A Brand New Funk)' was cancelled. Instead of releasing it on his own label he issued some of the tracks as singles, but then scrapped the rest and recorded a brand new album, with '2001' coming out on Aftermath in 1999, and including none of the aborted 'The Chronic II' tracks. Of the singles which came out from 1994 onwards, 'Natural Born Killaz' was written for the soundtrack to the 'Murder Was The Case' film in 1994, and featured Ice Cube And Sam Sneed, while 'California Love' was credited to '2Pac featuring Dr. Dre and Roger Troutman'. 1997 saw the release of 'Game Over' from Scarface featuring Dr. Dre, Ice Cube, Too $hort & B Real, and while all of those songs appear on this album, these are the original versions, including 'California Love' without 2Pac, 'Zoom' with Snoop Doggy Dogg instead of LL Cool J, and 'Natural Born Killaz' with a verse by Sam Sneed. I've said before that I'm not the biggest fan of hip-hop, but since finding these albums from Dr. Dre, Snoop Doggy Dogg and MF DOOM/Ghostface Killah I've come to realise that I was missing out on something by ignoring them in the early 90's, and this album in particular is swiftly becoming one of my favourites.   



Track listing

01 Intro (feat. George Clinton & Chris Tucker)
02 Da Godfather (feat. Baby S)
03 California Love (feat. Roger Troutman)
04 Split Personality (feat. E-A Ski)
05 My Life (Smokin' Weed 4 Hours)
06 It's Entertainment (Skit)
07 Monay (feat. King T. & Dawn Robinson)
08 Street Scholars (feat. J-Flexx & Sam Sneed)
09 Zoom (feat. Snoop Doggy Dogg)
10 211 (Skit) (feat. Nancy Fletcher & Fingas)
11 Natural Born Killaz (feat. Sam Sneed & Ice Cube)
12 Blueberry (feat. Snoop Doggy Dogg & Sam Sneed)
13 Game Over (feat. Scarface, Too $hort & Ice Cube)
14 House Calls (feat. Baby S & the Casino Crew)

Tuesday, January 4, 2022

Dr. Dre - The Chronicle (1992)

Dr. Dre's debut studio album 'The Chronic' was released in 1992 on Death Row Records, and made him one of the best-selling American music artists of 1993. It earned him a Grammy Award for Best Rap Solo Performance for the single 'Let Me Ride', as well as several accolades for the single 'Nuthin' But A 'G' Thang'. Not only that, but also that year he produced Death Row label-mate Snoop Doggy Dogg's debut album 'Doggystyle', as well as mentoring producers such as his stepbrother Warren G, Snoop Dogg's cousin Daz Dillinger, Sam Sneed and Mel-Man. The album is named after a slang term for high-grade cannabis, and its cover is an homage to Zig-Zag rolling papers, and although it was a Dre solo album, it featured many appearances by then-emerging American rapper Snoop Doggy Dogg, who used the album as a launch pad for his own solo career, making him a superstar before he'd even released a recording of his own. The album peaked at number three on the Billboard 200 and has been certified 3x Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America, which led to Dr. Dre becoming one of the top ten best-selling American performing artists of 1993. It established Dre's patented G-funk sound, consisting of fat, blunted Parliament-Funkadelic beats, soulful backing vocals, and live instruments for the rolling basslines and whiny synths, and for the next four years it was virtually impossible to hear mainstream hip-hop that wasn't affected in some way by Dre and his patented G-funk. The album launched the careers of many West Coast hip hop artists, including Snoop Doggy Dogg, Daz Dillinger, Kurupt, Nate Dogg, and Warren G, all of whom subsequently pursued successful commercial careers, and 'The Chronic' is widely regarded as the album that re-defined West Coast hip hop, demonstrating gangsta rap's commercial potential as a multi-platinum commodity, while establishing G-funk as the most popular sound in hip hop music, and Death Row Records as a dominant force in 1990's hip hop. The album was re-released in 2009 as 'The Chronic Re-Lit', which included seven previously unreleased tracks, but these weren't the only out-takes to surface over the years, and so when a number of them appeared on the net they were eagerly pounced on by fans, with the the most frequent comment being 'why don't they make music this good today?'. I've added those seven tracks from the 'Re-Lit' re-issue to another half a dozen that later surfaced online, including the original longer version of 'Rat Tat Tat Tat', to make a companion album to that classic record, which I've wittily titled 'The Chronicle', as taken together they provide a complete history of the album that jump-started hip-hop in the 90's. A few of these out-takes have also appeared on lost collections from Snoop Doggy Dogg, as both artists featured heavily on the tracks and so they could have appeared under the name of either artist, and so to avoid duplication I've removed them from this album as they can be heard on the recent Snoop Doggy Dogg post.     



Track listing

01 Die Muthafucka Die (feat. Top Dogg)
02 Poor Young Dave (feat. Snoop Doggy Dogg)
03 Foo Nay Mic (feat. CPO)
04 Rat Tat Tat Tat (original recording feat. Snoop Doggy Dogg)
05 O.G. to B.G. (feat. Snoop Doggy Dogg)
06 Slippin' In The West (feat. CPO & Kurupt)
07 Niggaz Don't Give A Fuck (feat. Tha Dogg Pound, The Lady Of Rage & Snoop Doggy Dogg)
08 Dogg Collar (feat. Snoop Doggy Dogg)
09 Mr. Officer (feat. RBX & Prince Ital Joe)
10 Touchdown (feat. Snoop Doggy Dogg)
11 Smoke Enough Bud (feat. Jewell & Snoop Doggy Dogg)
12 187um (Deep Cover Remix feat. Snoop Doggy Dogg)
13 Would You Ride (feat. Kurupt, Tyrone, Daz, Snoop Doggy Dogg & Amber)

Thursday, December 30, 2021

Snoop Doggy Dogg - Playin' 4 Keepz (1991) UPDATE

There were a couple of tracks on this album where I wasn't 100% happy with the quality, and luckily I stumbled on a better recording of '187 (It's On)', so I've replaced the slightly thin-sounding version with this much better one. The Yandex link is updated and so is Soulseek, so either download the whole thing again, or just the one song from Soulseek. 'Longbeach Is A Muthafucca' will have to stay there unless I find a better version of that one. 



Track listing

01 Let 'Em Understand (feat. Tha Foesum)
02 Long Beach Is A Muthafucca (feat. Warren G)
03 Do You Remember (feat. George Clinton)
04 187 (It's On) (feat. Lady Of Rage)
05 Playin' 4 Keepz (feat. Tha Convicts)
06 Niggaz Is Like That (feat. Chocolate & CPO)
07 County Bluez 
08 The Message
09 Smoke On (feat. Po', Broke, and Lonely)
10 Dope Slang Symphony (feat. Nate Dogg, Kurupt Tha Kingpin, and Dat Nigga Daz)
11 True To The Game
12 Hoe I Like (feat. Dr. Dre)

Friday, December 24, 2021

Snoop Doggy Dogg - Playin' 4 Keepz (1991)

Calvin Cordozar Broadus Jr., known professionally as Snoop Dogg (previously Snoop Doggy Dogg and briefly Snoop Lion), was born on 20 October 1971, and shortly after graduating from high school at Long Beach Polytechnic High School in 1989, he was arrested for possession of cocaine, and for the next three years, was frequently incarcerated. With his two cousins Nate Dogg and Lil' ½ Dead, and friend Warren G, he recorded homemade tapes as the group 213, named after the area code of their native Long Beach at that time. One of his early solo freestyles over 'Hold On' by En Vogue was on a mixtape that fortuitously wound up with Dr. Dre, who was so impressed by the sample that he called Broadus to audition. When he began recording, he took the stage name Snoop Doggy Dogg, and together he and Dr. Dre began working on the theme song of the 1992 film 'Deep Cover', and then on Dr. Dre's debut solo album 'The Chronic'. He had in fact been recording for a while before that big break, and had even taped an album in 1991 for Future Shock Entertainment called 'Over The Counter', which was released as a cassette tape that year. It was originally 'Over The Counter', and not Dr. Dre's 'The Chronic', that was to be the debut album for both Snoop Doggy Dogg and the Death Row label, but the record was pulled off the production line and never had an official release, other than the cassette copies sold at swap-meets. This was due to the fact that Death Row did not have the financial capabilities to support itself as a legitimate record label in 1991, and as a result their distributors Priority Records, Sony Music and Time Warner were unable to legally release it onto the market. Around the same time Snoop also recorded some other demos, including a second version of 'Deep Cover', and another collaboration with Dr. Dre on 'Smoke On'. Only six tracks from 'Over he Counter' have ever surfaced online, but if you add those to some other pieces recorded at the same time we end up with an album that could have been released a full two years before his official debut release 'Doggystyle'. Whether it would have catapulted him to stardom like 'Doggystyle' did we'll never know, as those two years honing his craft probably gave that debut album the extra edge that helped it achieve the success that it did. However, it's interesting to be able to listen to these songs that were recorded when he was just starting out, and to hear the emergent talent that has kept him at the top of the rap scene for all these years.    



Track listing

01 Let 'Em Understand (feat. Tha Foesum)
02 Long Beach Is A Muthafucca (feat. Warren G)
03 Do You Remember (feat. George Clinton)
04 187 (It's On) (feat. Lady Of Rage)
05 Playin' 4 Keepz (feat. Tha Convicts)
06 Niggaz Is Like That (feat. Chocolate & CPO)
07 County Bluez 
08 The Message
09 Smoke On (feat. Po', Broke, and Lonely)
10 Dope Slang Symphony (feat. Nate Dogg, Kurupt Tha Kingpin, and Dat Nigga Daz)
11 True To The Game
12 Hoe I Like (feat. Dr. Dre)