It's August 22, 2025, 03:46:17 AM
Total Members Voted: 13
So I'm prolly one of the very few ones who rate Kuruption over Tha Doggfather, lol. Which is kinda crazy too considering the fact that Doggfather was like my 3rd or 4th rap album ever! Bought it back in '97... But I remember feeling like it was a huge letdown after I heard Doggystyle and All Eyez On Me over at friend's houses before, which made me wanna buy the newer album in the first place.With Kuruption however I never really understood why ppl disliked it so much. Maybe it's because I enjoy my 90's East Coast just as much as I do the West Coast classics, but I also loved the whole concept and artwork. And even though the West Coast disc went way harder then the EC one, I still enjoyed the whole project overall. Of course Tha Streetz... is a far better album, but Kuruption is not bad at all. Definitely better than Doggfather imo.I just can't with Snoop's whisper flow on that album
i like certain elements of this one better but the chorus gets a lil too crowded the album version was more produced i do like some of the sounds they took out for the final version tho
good, another vote for Kuruption, I was hoping it would be more even, I'm still the only one who voted a tie. And yeah, I agree with you about the artwork and theme, like I said before, I think Kurupt was really rockin with some good ideas still at the rhyme (time) those days, it was just a bit sloppy. Like the commercials on BET kept the same theme but if you remember them they were like overdone and sloppy. ...as for East and West disc being equal... it's your subjective opinion and it sounds like with your age there was some kind of sentimentality there, but wow, really... you put East and West disc out there as equals....smh.....ya buddy....I can go with you on "Tha Life" and that's it, when it comes to the East disc. Maybe the Nore remix, but that's about it, and I think the Nore mix just got haphazardly added but not in the official liner notes. I can do without all the tracks on the East Disc save for "The Life" West Coast Disc = 7.5East Coast Disc = 1.5
yeah man Im pretty much in agreement tho Id rate them a little higherI would probably give the West Coast disc a solid 8 and maybe a 3 on the East Coast Discthe East Coast tracks I likeThe Life - dope back and forth with Kurupt and El-Drex about their Philly daysGame - I really like the beat, reminds me of something AZ or Nas could spit overWe Can Freak it Out - just the fact that Nore is on it with Kurupt after the beef years earlier is dope as hell
Another thing wrong with the album was the opening track was so sloppy. If you’re gonna do that long as intro then at least make it a seperate track, I used to always have to fast forward to “This One’s 4 U” and then his lyrics needed to tighten up on the track as well, but good beat and chorus, concept okay as well
“The Life” - ya man such a beautiful song, the way Drex-El and him go back and forth reminiscing, maybe Kurupts best ever storytelling type of song. It reminds me of another track that came out about the same time was on BadAzz album called “The Last Time”. Remember rap albums in those days started putting like one of these sort of sentimental tracks on, like in 2001 Slim Calhoun had a similar track called “Worldly Ways” those have a lot of replay value.“Game” - yeah dope beat and chorus, but Kurupt was sloppy on it“We Can Freak It” - this was damn near a certified banger. Only complaint really is it wasn’t on the liner notes, it was added last minute, and also even the lyrics seem rushed, like they just got together and freestyled it. But yeah, I used to bump this one for sure.“Who U Be” - I forgot to mention this one, it had a nice beat and chorus just a lil sloppy with the lyrics but I used to bump it
yeah alot of his verses are sloppy because this is around the time Kurupt got lazy and started freestyling on songs...I can count maybe on one hand the tracks which he actually sat down and wrote...one of the written ones is "Thats Gangsta" where he got introspective...tracks like "Its A Set Up" which had a great beat but he was just rambling through the track
I don't hear it on "That's Gangsta", what makes you think he took time to write that one?It could have been the style he was going for, like he was going for like a more loose style, like sort of more about image than being a perfectionist, but definitely he forgot his mentor Rakim, because at Death Row you could hear a lot of the Rakim influence, like he was perfectionist. Perfectionist Rakim Style Death Row Version of Kurupt3. "Put That on Something" 12. "Ask Yourself a Question" (featuring Dr. Dre) 6. "Tha Life"
Well for example this part I think was written “Life ain't complete without the heat to blastYou couldn't do a nigga without the extra clips to mashYou ain't blastin'?Then you only learned a fractionYou only learned somethin'The rest is closed-captionedHow could I make it over there where the light shine?HomeWhere a nigga's not aloneCause everywhere where I seen or turnIt seems a nigga got a lot to learnI pose like a posterPull the heat out the hollsterBlast, get ghostand shake the whole coast”also his flow appears to be on point throughout the whole song…a lot of the tracks that’s not really the case…I remember someone saying on the Bomb1st forum that he was drunk half the time during recording of the album, hence the freestyles
I still don't really hear it.. for comparison let me just pull up a random Dogg Food verse[Verse 3: Kurupt]D.P.G. eliminates the whole areaBeyond the thought dismemberin', muthafuck surrenderin'!Who? What? When? Let's tear shit the fuck up!The homies coolin' while you and ya chest get fuckin' blew inProvoke us, survey wit' the superior focusI'm Dat Nigga like Daz, crooked as scoliosisIt's impossible to survive on my arrivalWhen I arrive, it's left to ya instinct of survivalMashin', cashin' in chips, I gotta lickSadistic, sick minded I find it, I'm mentally sickAnd badder, it doesn't matter when ya enterin'Ya just entered in a war zone all aloneWit' ya microphone unguardedI just started — poetical poltergeist precise and cold-heartedEmpty! Tempt me? Simply ya get shotYa forgot I'm down to empty out my clip on ya blockStop! Make the whole place evacuateWait until we face-to-face, then it escalatesDuck down! Kurupt clowns niggas daily, hoes can't play meObserve — I serve those that betray me!...if Kurupt would've done a side by side like this of his lyrics from Dogg Food vs. his lyrics from Kuruption! he would've realized he was fuccin up his first big solo oppurtunity.
kurupt came back lyrically on tha streetz iz a muthastill wasn't peak kurupt, but he was spitting space boogie was back to the freestyle type raps, outside of on onsite, which he killed
He also has the ability to make dope music without really being super lyricalIf I had a choice I’d rather of course listen to Death Row Kurupt but I think the West Coast disc of Kuruption is on par with Streetz and Space Boogie
that's true, he can still ride a beat with a simple style on top tier production and that shit bangs that's why space boogie is a near classic 1.streetz is a mutha2.space boogie3.kuruption 4.against the grain (OG release)5.same day diff shit6.against the grain (death row release)7.streetlights
exactly.. it's like a different style, where he rides the beat, and he did it on "We Can Freak It" which is a classic song to this day, and people loved it then and now. So he could still make dope music when he wasn't doing his Rakim style.So that's why I break it down like Rakim style Kurupt, and then ridin' the beat sort of freestyle version of Kurupt. But when he's not focusing on the lyrics, he's relying very heavily on his homies and all that great production and industry connections that he has. Like Fred Wreck made the Space Boogie album the successful album it was. That album damn near should've had Fred Wreck on the cover of it alongside Kurupt.