It's August 28, 2025, 02:37:08 PM
Hittman is not a real person. He was a computer program generated by Dr. Dre and Mel Man back in the mid 90's. When Dre started treating Mel-Man like shit, Mel infiltrated the computer and put a virus in the hittman program
are you people that dumb and slow...lol...
Tuff one...but quik is up there...put it on me is classic imo and on some detox shit...dj lethal>>dj quik....rza>>premo.....dre>>>quik....rza=dre....dre, rza, quik, dj lethal>>>>>timberland, rockwielder, EIMINEM, mannie fresh
Here was Daz, in 1998, at a time when No Limit Records had taken rap game hostage, and the West Coast had fallen into coma that it still hasn't recovered from. Death Row had lost it's biggest superstars, Dre had denounced gangsta rap and left millions of dollars behind just to get away from the label, Pac had died, Snoop had a nasty legal battle with the label, and everyone from Kurupt to Nate Dogg had found better record deals elsewhere.So here was Daz, all alone, stranded on Death Row. Nobody was paying attention to this album except for diehard fans of the label. And from the ashes of Death Row's crumbling infrastructure, with their label head incarcerated.... Daz drops the illest album of 1998 and in doing so he furthers the Death Row legacy. There was no significant decrease in quality between this album and past Death Row classics! Agreed?"In California" should have blown up, and this album should have been 3x platinum. The least we can do is give this album some love on an appreciation thread. This was the last great album of the Death Row dynasty.
a great album, i dont skip any tracks on it. shitz bang