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Quote from: Prodigal Son on June 10, 2011, 05:19:18 PMKeep their heads ringin, wasn't always rumored Sam Sneed or Barney Rubble did thatall i know j-flexx wrote it for dre.
Keep their heads ringin, wasn't always rumored Sam Sneed or Barney Rubble did that
The problem with Suge and Dre is they sit on albums way too long and then the demand dies down and fans are letdown. People want to hear the music. You can say whatever you want about Master P, but he dropped albums left and right, right and left, constantly pushing out singles and moving units with No Limit Records -- Suge and Dre meanwhile you're lucky to get 1 to 3 releases a year out of them.
Quote from: love33 on June 13, 2011, 02:46:07 PMThe problem with Suge and Dre is they sit on albums way too long and then the demand dies down and fans are letdown. People want to hear the music. You can say whatever you want about Master P, but he dropped albums left and right, right and left, constantly pushing out singles and moving units with No Limit Records -- Suge and Dre meanwhile you're lucky to get 1 to 3 releases a year out of them.the thing is that Dre is a craftsman while Beats By The Pound are like industrious workers. I mean in the early days the production on No Limit albums was almost flawless but as soon as they switched into that "let's drop 70 albums a year" mode (from 97-98 on) the quality of the music and especially the production (since the rapping's never been No Limit's forte, obviously lol) drastically plummeted. Dre had an interest in making sonically perfect music that would mark its era and "change the future of funk" while P had an interest on taking advantage of the favorable conditions for him to make a quick buck (huge buzz, receptive market, juicy deal with a huge advance for each album released, a fat cut of the wholesale price). Dre is a musician first and foremost. P is a businessman first. As for Suge, well he didn't have P's channels to push an average album gold or platinum(street promotion, relentless hustlin, etc.), and he needed to rely on the traditional route (extensive promotion + a good deal of controversy) and it was more costly for him to release an album than it was for P so he had to be sure that the quality was there, as well as the commercial potential. that's why he shelved Danny Boy's album IMO, he tested its potential with Slip N Slide (which had DeVante on the beat and Ginuwine on the hook) and saw that the response wasn't too crazy so he decided not to push it.
*****Dre has asked a male singer named Cocaine to come in and rework some of his vocals on the Boulevard chorus. Dre doesn't feel that the song is properly layered yet. "One of the things I like most about producing is recording vocals," he says. "I like instructing people, but I'm also trying to bring out a good performance, so I work with them--encourage them." When Cocaine arrives, Dre plays the track. Even though Cocaine is a relative unknown ("He must not want to get his stuff on anybody's station, naming himself Cocaine," says Dre) and Dre is the top producer in the game, he is enthusiastic, even sweet, in explaining what he's looking for. When it appears Cocaine is not getting it, Dre sings the part, revealing perfect pitch and a surprisingly nice voice. Cocaine listens to him, nods his head and starts warming up his pipes.*****^weird.Jelly Roll did the chorus, not Kokane
Dubcnn: Besides Jayo, Kam, Suga Free, George Clinton, who else do you have on the album?I got up and coming artist Young Bleezy, Trajic, we got Mamie Gun who's definitely somebody to watch for.Dubcnn: She's not with Jelly Roll anymore right?No!Dubcnn: You told me you had some words for some people on the record too...Yeah. And I'ma save the surprise. I ain't never fucked with no Jelly Roll. Sometimes I had to do that but *starts singing "The Wash" (Dr. Dre & Snoop Dogg ft. Jelly Roll) I'd rather be riding than walking, and all you loud mouth niggas keep talkin', la la laaa *singing* You know what I'm saying? I might have to turn around an 'Knoc-Turnal' your style! You know what I mean? Sometimes thats the way rapping’s been, ain't nobody I wanna see dead, but take it to the stage, sucka! Put that in your pipe and smoke it! You know what I'm saying? It's a competitive competition, even though we on the same Olympic U.S. team but still, we trying to be the best we can be. Right now I'll go up against anybody. I don't care homie, we right here groovin' homie, and it's authenticated. On this album, George Clinton crowns me Duke Of Funk, so nobody can take that. Oooohwoooow..
dubcnn.com: Let's clear this up once and for all, cause people still ask me about it. Who sang the hook of "On The Blvd" off The Wash?Uhhh.... I think his name is Jelly Roll. *laughs*dubcnn.com: Okay, cause you still have people arguing that it's Kokane, so...Well, okay, you know how people can distinct it? The Jelly Roll flavor when he sings like that is more Church, it's not George Clinton. I don't mock people. You know? Everything I do, my background comes from growing up in church, so that's the Deacon man.
shakingmyfuckinghead at me latching on to popular opinion. i fuckin hate when my mom and dad are like "What show did u get that from", "when did Snoop Dogg say that", i fuckin hate shit like that. 1st off I rarely get shit from TV, i get it from real life and people when we're talking and ONLY (i stress ONLY) when it's something that's not common knowledge or it's some new game i've NEVER heard before, it's not my fault at 22 im way smarter than u ever could be at 22. it's not my fault that people like wat i like. i admit i've tried to gain that type of ear when i was like 14 but since then it's mostly been all me. J' u have no idea how much u just blew me with that... smmfh