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Quote from: OG Will_B on February 14, 2011, 08:39:27 AMQuote from: imsohappydatmydiccsbig on February 14, 2011, 08:35:20 AMu compared them.Dre's career-break wit Quincy's career-break..Actually no. I said gaps between studio albums. Not the same, and obviously not a career break for Dre. a poster, said that Dre fucked over his fans, for waiting so long,and then u jumped in and brought Q's name aong - and compared them..do u want me to quote u?
Quote from: imsohappydatmydiccsbig on February 14, 2011, 08:35:20 AMu compared them.Dre's career-break wit Quincy's career-break..Actually no. I said gaps between studio albums. Not the same, and obviously not a career break for Dre.
u compared them.Dre's career-break wit Quincy's career-break..
yes, if ur comapring Q's catalouge wit Dre's catalgoue, and their career-spans --yes, André Young is most def an underacchiever.
Oh I said that did I? Quote from: imsohappydatmydiccsbig on February 14, 2011, 08:10:25 AMyes, if ur comapring Q's catalouge wit Dre's catalgoue, and their career-spans --yes, André Young is most def an underacchiever.I like it how you made that judgement based on Dre also not comparing to Quincy's career span.Perhaps Dre needs a time machine to make up that extra 20+ years for you.
I know y'all probably thinking "not another thread" lol but I think this one will be unique and may create conversationThe topic of this thread, it does not matter whether we like these songs. My opinion, nor any of yours matters in that sense. I think one thing we can all agree on is "Kush" is Dre's attempt at "satisfying" his loyal fan base, those who loved "2001" and what has become what we know as west coast music. Again, whether or not you think its a good attempt doesn't matter; as long as you acknowledge that's an attempt."I Need a Doctor" is a typical 2011 single, flavor of the month beat and female chorus. This of course is the mainstream single. Again, whether or not you like the track doesn't matter, we can all acknowledge it's similar to a lot of recent hits by such artists as B.o.B., T.I., Eminem, Diddy, Lupe Fiasco and others (same producer, different catchy female hook).Kush was released first and I Need A Doctor 2nd. I often see a trend here and wonder if you guys see the same thing. Artists who are used to and plan on selling records such as Dr. Dre (discredit underground artists) often follow this trend. First single, ("street single") release something you believe your loyal fan base will love. Dr. Dre (and everyone involved) believe his loyal fan base will LOVE "Kush" and get super excited about his record; excited to the point where they're minds are made up that they're going to buy the album when it comes out, before being released. (Bare with me on this because Detox is such a highly anticipated album, many made up there mind 10 years ago they'd purchased it, but this example works for most mainstream artists and that specific point fits them more than it does Dr. Dre right now).Second, you release the "official single" and its something that's a lot more radio friendly and mainstream (i.e. "i need a doctor"). This is too attract "fair weather" fans.This way, on release of the "street single", it holds a similar sound to previous records which satisfied loyal fan bases. Loyal fan bases matter a lot more than "fair weather" fans because they're the group of fans that always purchase there favorite artists album. But "fair weather" fans help bring the album over the top. For a mainstream artist, in most cases, releasing singles that just satisfy your loyal fan bases won't propel your sales to new heights. You satisfy them first (Kush) to get them excited about your new album. Once they're on board, bring on the the 2nd single to attract new fans ("I need a doctor:). = they ALL buy your album, huge success.But this trend happens with a lot of mainstream artists..Think Snoop Dogg releasing "Vato" first, T.I. releasing "No Matter What", Eminem releasing "Not Afraid", (all attempts at satisfying loyal fan bases before bringing on such singles as "Love the Way you Lie", "Whatever U Like", etc). There are millions of examples of this happening (loyal fan base single first, fair weather single second), but I just named a few.Anyone else see it?
Quote from: OG Will_B on February 14, 2011, 09:13:57 AMOh I said that did I? Quote from: imsohappydatmydiccsbig on February 14, 2011, 08:10:25 AMyes, if ur comapring Q's catalouge wit Dre's catalgoue, and their career-spans --yes, André Young is most def an underacchiever.I like it how you made that judgement based on Dre also not comparing to Quincy's career span.Perhaps Dre needs a time machine to make up that extra 20+ years for you. okay, i can do that too, if its important to u.. Quincy Jones (a small percentage of his career)1982-2010 (9 albums, + 8 produced albums) //NOT to mention his duties as an orchestrator, tv-scores etc etc (plus dude was already old as hell during these years)Dr Dre (his whole career)(1983-2010 (2 albums, 2 groupalbums, +7 produced albums)STILL underachievement in comparison wit Q's work-ethic, in terms of that period of time and in documented catalogues
Quote from: No Compute on February 14, 2011, 02:45:48 AMQuote from: From Dre-Day to Helter Skelter on February 14, 2011, 02:40:44 AMi think you're on point.but the loyal fans wanted a Dre produced single
Quote from: From Dre-Day to Helter Skelter on February 14, 2011, 02:40:44 AMi think you're on point.but the loyal fans wanted a Dre produced single
i think you're on point.but the loyal fans wanted a Dre produced single
Quote from: HighEyeCue on February 14, 2011, 05:55:55 AMQuote from: No Compute on February 14, 2011, 02:45:48 AMQuote from: From Dre-Day to Helter Skelter on February 14, 2011, 02:40:44 AMi think you're on point.but the loyal fans wanted a Dre produced singleI can see that (the only way "Kush" wasn't a "good" attempt at Dre's loyal fan base was because it wasn't produced by Dre. But the sound of song still represents his loyal fan base.
the sound of song (Kush) still represents his loyal fan base.
I think it was JohnnyL who said it the best.This board was buzzing when "Kush" came out, then when "I Need A Doctor" came out, everybody who fucked with "Kush" started hating on it.The sooner you all come to understand it doesn't matter what Dre puts out that you're all going to hate on it, the better. If he puts out something like "I Need A Doctor" or something that doesn't have that traditional Dre sound, you're going to say he sold out & it sucks & if he re-creates that old, classic sound of his you're all going to say "Dre is just recycling beats".
Quote from: Lunatic on February 14, 2011, 09:45:08 AMthe sound of song (Kush) still represents his loyal fan base.Not at all. His loyal fanbase isn't the metrosexual clubbers. It is the people on the streets (Death Row era) and hardcore/originalist hip hop heads (Ruthless era). There was nothing "street" about Kush, even though I agree it was the "street single" -- Interscope is just sorely mistaken if they think Kush is what the loyal fanbase wants to hear. I am still waiting for the real street single for the loyal fanbase.