It's May 13, 2024, 02:25:21 AM
interesting take i don’t think it was hammer in particular .. but to summarize what u sayin, dre felt his grip on the label and decision making was getting weaker, which is understandable considering suge having creative control over dre wasn’t a recipe for success seems like suge was feelin himself after gettin pac n started gassin himself up to think he was a genius musical scout when pac’s signing was more the luck of the draw disaster in music always strikes when cats start givin themselves too much credit and stop appreciating their bread n butter
this joint from that unreleased Hammer album was tight...except for Hammers verses
Yeah if you really wanna know how wack Hammer was on the mic just compare Pac's reference vocals for "Unconditional Love" that was on his Greatest Hits album vs. the wackass Hammer version of "Unconditional Love". Pac tried to hook him up with a great song just on the strength of their Bay Area Connection—and Hammer destroyed it.
Shortsighted. MC Hammer had much more of the work ethic that Dr. Dre wanted to work with than either Snoop or PacMC Hammer works
Pac had many faults but work ethic was never one of them
but he didn’t like to be told what to do, retakes, coaching on his cadences etc. he was the type that would knock out numerous tracks in 1 session. opposite of dre, who was more meticulous and would spend a gang of time perfecting just 1 track. pac’s method was in direct conflict with how dre worked.