It's August 21, 2025, 08:42:36 PM
Kuruption is far more disappointing than doggfather.My favorite track is It's a Set Up and that is a 10/10 song imo. C-Walk and We can freak it are also really good. The Warren G produced track is good. Ho's a housewife is a let down for a Dre song imo.Other than that it is a forgettable album for me.
The album has some good moments—“Put that on Something” is a banger people never talk about—but I’m making this thread about all the things wrong. So what all do you think is wrong with the album? I thought “The Set Up” was a bit lazy and underproduced, sounds like a dope beat they just bought and then rapped over and didn’t spend time analyzing all the elements like Dre would like intro/outro, effects, making sure lyrics are done over if they aren’t flawless
Like Higheyecue knows I’m always fascinated with that forgotten period in West Coast Rap that started with Doggfather flop (I know everyone defends it now but those know who remember its release date) and then ended with “Bitch Please” being released as a single/video for Top DoggSo let’s say the period from fall 1996 until Spring 1999 — this was the era in West Coast Rap of…—being trolled for 2 years about a King Tee album that never happened—Aftermath Presents—a subpar substandard Gang Related and Gridlocked soundtracks—Daz heroic RRGB that didn’t even go gold—Bad Azz solo—Snoop No LimitList goes on and on I have to keep adding to the post… but for this thread I’m gonna list all the things wrong with Kuruption album.
actually the west coast disc is greathe's not lyrically at his peak but still was makin dope gangsta shit the east coast disc is what's wrong wut kuruption.. coulda kept it at just the west coast disc n it woulda been a much more respectable debut
I have a love/hate relationship with this album lolthere are elements I love 1. the Warren G track that you mentioned in the other post is one of my favorite tracks by Kurupt and I love the piano keys2. Kurupt sounds almost like the Death Row Kurupt on a handful of tracks, "Thats Gangsta", "Fresh", "The Life" and a couple more3. the 2 beats by Daz are classic and so are the ones by Battlecatnow the bad1.Kurupt just freestyling over a lot of the tracks. This album is where the inconsistency started that has pretty much lasted the remaining years of his career2.you mentioned "No Feelings" another one that is a head scratcher was "Gimmewhatcugot" featuring some no name Barshawn. Kurupt just freestyling over the beat which is nothing to write home about either but the crazy thing was that this was released as the 2nd single3.Maybe one of the wackest tracks of all time "I Wanna" which is a shame because the beat by Devante bangs but the lyrics are so cringe worthythere's more things I want to say about the album but Ill add them at a later time
Nobody gonna give love to “Put That On Something”?? That’s an all original track that doesn’t sound like anything else before or after it
Biggest thing i remember about that album was how Kurupt was trying to rebrand himself. We all knew him from being DPGC and wearing blue and grey and Death Row and all that stuff. Then this album comes out and he's dressed like a 40's era gangster. No repping DPG anywhere on the album cover. I know Suge had the majority of DPG locked under contract and wouldn't let them appear on his album, but the lack of any sort of big Westcoast names other than Dre hurt him. He could've got Warren, some of the LBC Crew, Crooked I, DOC, RBX, Butch Cassidy, etc, some of the other DPG affiliates who weren't under Death Row contract on the album. He was really repping Philly hard on this, trying to be more eastcoast, and the hardcore fans knew he was from Philly, but the casual fans knew him as a West Coast rapper. It was a big change that most people didn't like. Of course, he switched and went back to his roots on Streetz Iz A Mutha and you saw how that album blew up. When DAZ left Death Row, he came out with RAW, which was basically the same old Daz, working with the same people, didn't change anything, and it worked well. Kurupt should've done that too.AND, the worst part is ASK YOURSELF A QUESTION feat Dre was a last minute addition. It wasn't even on the tracklist but just a sticker on the album cover, and not every album had the sticker, so he couldn't use Dre's name to help sell records, which was a big deal at the time. I really think Kurupt was trying to get under Dre's team and become part of that and Dre was on that whole "Gangster Rap is Dead" era so Kurupt was trying to go that route. But just like Dre ended up doing, he went back to gangster rap. I think both Dre and Kurupt would've continued down the 'non gangster rap' line had it worked for them.