It's August 28, 2025, 04:07:08 PM
Quote from: Spice 2 sees the bitch in you on August 29, 2011, 01:34:34 AMPrince Paul is def. top 5 material. He's been producing on classics as long as Dre, plus he put out one of the greatest albums of all time. And I'd put RZA above Dre for all the classic Wu albums. Not only that but the guy is still relevant today. He's transcended the role of hip hop producer to the point where he's scoring soundtracks for movies. One of Dr. Dre's goals is to score movies, something which the RZA has already accomplished. My list probably goes RZA, Dre, Primo, Prince Paul, Pete Rock. Dre did some scoring on "Bad Boys 2". I would put RZA up there as well but I feel like he gets a pass in areas where nobody would ever let Dre slide. He's kind of allowed to just make good music without people holding up the classics he's done for comparative purposes. It's like this. I don't think Michael Jackson ever topped "Thriller" but he was still an icon until the day he died because he created that blueprint for the guys who became the new stars like Usher and Justin Timberlake. Same with Madonna and her influence on Britney and Lady Gaga. Same with Nate Dogg and these artists who came through today.
Prince Paul is def. top 5 material. He's been producing on classics as long as Dre, plus he put out one of the greatest albums of all time. And I'd put RZA above Dre for all the classic Wu albums. Not only that but the guy is still relevant today. He's transcended the role of hip hop producer to the point where he's scoring soundtracks for movies. One of Dr. Dre's goals is to score movies, something which the RZA has already accomplished. My list probably goes RZA, Dre, Primo, Prince Paul, Pete Rock.
He's in the top 5 as far as GOAT hip hop producers, along with RZA, Primo, Prince Paul and Pete Rock. Whatever wack shit he puts out nowadays isn't going to take away from his past accomplishments.
Basically, at this point, I expect Dre to continue to decline as the years progress. Artists are like athletes in that you rise and fall, peak and decline. I mean, after Quincy Jones produced Thriller, it was a gradual decline after that. Same thing with Dre and The Chronic, his best album (artistically speaking).
Yes Dre is the best producer ever and he's better than he's ever been sonically, as shown on Relapse.
Dr. Dre is the greatest producer in the history of hip hop, but he is well past his prime. Right now, he is barely above average as a producer. Clearly his artistic skills are declining. Mind you, I'm not talking about pure studio craft, but the artistry that enables a piece of music to transcend its genre confines and become something more than what it is on the surface.I'm one of those Chronic era listeners referred to earlier in the thread, and I'm glad b. laden brought it up, because while 2001 is imo the greatest mixed and mastered (and overall engineered) hip hop album of all time, the actual musicality of it for me is clearly a step down from Dre's prime, which was his three album run with Elife4zaggin, Chronic and Doggystyle. That's why I frequently say I won't truly get excited about Dre's current music until I see him get back to work with people with whom he collaborated during his prime, such as The Glove and Colin Wolfe. I really don't care about Scott Storch's involvement, to be honest with you. I could take it or leave it.
Anyway, I've used this analogy before, but I'll repeat it here because I think it fits well.Straight Outta Compton and prior = Michael Jordan in the mid-to-late 80s, when you could tell both had amazing pure talent; they just had to learn had to package it all togetherThe three album run I mentioned earlier = Michael Jordan during his first three-peatThen you have the sort of Death Row fallout and Aftermath compilation/Firm flop = MJ's turn to baseball and return with the #45 jersey2001 = MJ's second three-peat; you could tell Dre and MJ in both situations were not as good as they had been earlier in the primes, but since they were so far ahead of the pack in their primes, even with some fall off they were still best in the gamepost 2001 to around 2006 = MJ with the Wizards; still very good at what they do, but the decline was evident to even the casual observerAnd today's Dre and henceforth = post-Wizards MJ had he not gotten injured, barely above average, if that.Basically, at this point, I expect Dre to continue to decline as the years progress. Artists are like athletes in that you rise and fall, peak and decline. I mean, after Quincy Jones produced Thriller, it was a gradual decline after that. Same thing with Dre and The Chronic, his best album (artistically speaking).
"wine gets better wit time", thats the slang.. but the analogy isnt correct wit music imo. acting, sure -- but not in music i think.
it seems that way.As far as being the GOAT of producers, he's top 10, but if he was the GOAT he wouldn't need all these co-producers. Pac said it best when he said he's a bomb producer, but he doesn't produce anything. damn pac said that in 96.
Andre is the GOAT
Dre was the best of the best.If anyone can rejuvenate hip-hop it's him, but he's struggling.