It's August 22, 2025, 03:54:46 AM
So true homie, you and I were there when these albums first dropped. I was sitting at Best Buy on new release Tuesday waiting to get this album, same with Doggfather. And this disappointment was real. Knowing you had to wait years before another album from either dropped. It wasn't like you could just download songs, you bought a CD, you listened to it whether it was good or not cause that's all you had. There was no internet, the only news was through The Source or Rap Pages, like once a month. So we had no idea what was going through Snoop or Kurupt's minds when they totally switched up their appearance for these albums. Last time I saw Kurupt was on the Doggy Dogg World video dressed like a pimp. Then I hear he has an album coming out and i'm pumped. I go to buy it, and he's dressed like a 40's gangster on the cover rapping over an entire disc of east coast beats, like WTF? And none of the original DPGs are on the album, he's rapping with people like Baby S, El Drex, Roscoe, cats i've never even heard of back then. I was hella disappointed. Kuruption grew on me after a while, but just like Doggfather, it wasn't at all what i was expecting. It's easy for these younger guys to look back in hindsight and praise this album but unless you actually lived through it, you won't fully understand.
In real time I don’t know which album I was more disappointed in, Kuruption! Or Doggfather…probably Doggfather because that came out a few years before and Doggystyle was such a perfect album…I remember when I first heard Snoops Upside Ya Head and said to myself this bangs but something is missing… I think Dre said something similar in a Vibe article around the time it came out… then hearing the album I kind of felt the same way like some of these songs are dope but not next level dope…my 3 favorite songs from the album at that time were all collabs, Gold Rush, Downtown Assasins and Blueberry which might have been my favorite and Snoop is barely even on it…it’s grown on me after all this time however I will never forget the disappointment an almost 15 year old from Queens had at 1st listen
Yep.. that shows how Snoop fell off, because "Gold Rush" and "BlueBerry" were for the LBC Crew album and being Top Dog Snoop got to take their shit and pretend like it was his own. But imagine Doggfather without those two joints? Now Snoop, would've really been in trouble. I'm not totally dissing Snoop, because even the 1997-98 Snoop was still my favorite rapper and I'd waste 20 bucks on a CD at Sam Goody just because he had a guest feature in those days. So he was still dope—but it wasn't Doggystyle.So Doggfather was the most disappointed I ever was buying music. Guess what my second because disappointment was? THE GAME IS TO BE SOLD! The scene of it was dope as hell it was when they first started having midnight sales and I waited in a long line at BlockBusterMusic to buy it around July 4th Monday Night. Master P always put a hype track up front, so things started off okay... but that same feeling of depression came over me as I got towards track 20 just like Doggfather two years before that. I was so depressed I remember I picked up some sketchy looking hitchhiker in the hood, and gave him a ride all the way across the city because I felt if the dude jacked me and my car I didn't even care about life anymore, lolKuruption! had enough fresh material to keep me from just feeling like I wanted to just drive my car off a bridge. That shit bumped pretty hard and I rolled around with it for months. I didn't have disappointment anywhere near the Snoop albums. Snoop was my hero as a kid. He fell in line with Hulk Hogan, Sylvester Stallone, Michael Jordan, Joe Montana, your hero is always supposed to come through for you when you need him most. It's like that classic 90's Nike Commercial, "Why We Believe in Heros" that had Montana throwing the Dwight Clark touchdown and Jordan hitting the jumper against Cleveland where he hung in the air for what seemed like forever.So I had Snoop on that level like Hogan, Stallone, Jordan, Joe Montana. He saved my life when my x-girlfriend made out with my best friend right in front of me at the first ever real "party" I ever went to in 6th grade. I thought my life was over, and then heard "Ain't No Fun" and it healed me. I never put Kurupt on such a pedestal, so that's why I didn't have to commit suicide when Kuruption underwhelmed. I did look up to Kurupt and tried to copy how he walks and moves, and sits, and stands, and dresses, and so on... but he's not an alpha-male. Snoop was the top dog and Kurupt was the little homie running alongside in "Who Am I".
yeah no matter how you feel about the album Kurupt had a couple of all time classic tracks on it, "We Can Freak It" and "C-Walk"...Snoop had a compilation of pretty dope songs but I can't say he had any classics...it also hurt Snoop that the OG track list was much better and had songs that were left off for one reason or another
The disappointment was real. I fuccin trusted these guys, dammit. That they knew what was best for me as a hip-hop head. When "Big Pimpin" came out the sound was much more light-hearted than Doggystyle, but dammit, I trusted these guys. So I just kept jamming away to it, and soon, it became my favorite jam of summer 94'. Warren G came out the same way, but I trusted it, and it ended up being a classic.Shit.. Same with 7 Day Theory. I'm expecting Daz, Johnny J, "How Do You Want It" sound—— and suddenly Pac goes into this dark and mysterious mode under Makeveli 7 Day Theory. But again, I trusted these guys. They know what the fucc their doing. Soon, it became my favorite album....Then Doggfather comes and it's a string of dissapointments....even Dre couldn't deliver he had like half the album of next level bangers and other half filler for Aftermath Presents...Bad Azz was supposed to be the next big star and he hit us with a banger single and gave us hope but again, too much filler...Kuruption was part of that. I was like, okay, he's got a new look, but the single is dope, so he's just taking this shit next level. He's got new artists like Baby S, and so I'm thinking, "okay, Kurupt is a label owner now like Suge and Dre, Kurupt is doing it big, he's about to go next level!"Daz RRGB was the exception. It was like exactly what I was hoping for and expected————but nobody cared and the album didn't even go gold. I also thought Warren's second album Take A Look Over Your Shoulder met my expectations——but failed to do the numbers (though it did go gold)
The east disc is still pretty forgettable. Definitely should have been 1 disc
How has no one mentioned “Play My Cards” it has that vintage battlecat sound
Yes "Another Day" definitely deserves mention (though it was sloppily thrown onto the album last minute) and as for "Play My Cards" -- I will tell you how no one mentioned.. and it certainly has nothing to do with Battlecat's stellar work on the track... and it has everything to do with this...I got scams for hundreds of gramsMe and my man, me and my pistol, a planFor about aWhole ki load of some powderStashin, dippin, dashin, smashin, tryin to cash inFrom the front to the back, and packinPull the strap and start clappinI'm about to move a little somethinA little sumptin-sumpinFor the homie, pack the pump and get to dumpinHit the liquor store, I wanna get paidA fifth of Hen, then back to the shadeWhat you got, smoke, loc, let's blaze upLet me get a toke, loc, and let's raise upPunks stop and get popped when funk popI'm worldwide while you thinkin: either he is or he's notInternational like Corey IYou can feel meIn the real way"International like Corey and I" who the hell is Corey? That line is so wack. I think net keyboard gangstaz in a the keystyle section could've written shit like this back in 01' and 02' when keystylin was the big thing at the forum.. and just so you remember who Kurupt really is, for comparison let's put it up side by side with this...Now, I’m a bonafide microphone technician wit' stylesI came to storm on these MC's like electrical cloudsHear me now — a Born Killer like Mick n' Mall'Down to trip and empty clips, and permanently exileThe oppositions, competition — discrete and dismantledLight ‘em up like candlesticks wit' the instinct of a vandalVandalize, how I reprimand MC's to freezeMovin' guarantees the temperature's decreased degreesFrozen stiff, 'cause what I’m holdin’ lifts the soulThis mental automatic weapon keeps me in controlNever fold, I scald like water in order to let these MC's know I slaughterSo time's gettin' shorterIt sorta limits ya, but to me, the sky’s the limitYa know I diminish ya to dust, TEC's sinisterBust one rhyme that’s like a voodoo hexConnect complex styles wit' my vast high-tech flex'Cause when there’s an MC like me who’s in there like swimwearDon’t despite me, 'cause all the hoes like me, mashin’ in NikesI done seen niggas on TV, dissin' to get dealsNow, I got one question, nigga — how does it feel?Check ya game, but I ain't even sayin' no namesProclaimed lyricist dissin’ this for fortune and fameDid I do somethin' to ya? Did we serve ya hoes?'Cause your on TV rappin’ like ya knew me and know meBut you don’t really know meDat muthafuckin' nigga from Tha D-P-G! Tha K-U-R-U-P-T!I’m too smooth (Muthafucka)And yet Kurupt went on a facebook rant last week because people complained about the Kuruption! album, I think it's pretty clear he needs to take a bit of responsibility
yupbut west coast disc is underrated a handful of gems on that one