Laugh Now Cry Later (Clean Version) (2006)

Artist: Ice Cube
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Product Summary
Label: Lench Mob Records
UPC: 00094636616322
Release Date: 6/6/2006
Buy.com Sku: 202625153
Item#: M2Y2T9
Format:  CD

Song Listing

Disc 1
Song TitleSample
1. Definition Of A West Coast G (Intro) ~ Ice Cube
2. Why We Thugs ~ Ice Cube
3. Smoke Some Weed ~ Ice Cube
4. Dimes & Nicks (A Call From Mike Epps) ~ Ice Cube
5. Child Support ~ Ice Cube
6. 2 Decades Ago ~ Ice Cube
7. Doin' What It Pose 2DO ~ Ice Cube
8. Laugh Now, Cry Later ~ Ice Cube
9. Stop Snitchin' ~ Ice Cube
10. Go to Church - (featuring Snoop Dogg/Lil Jon) ~ Ice Cube
11. N***a Trapp, The ~ Ice Cube
12. History Of Violence, A ~ Ice Cube
13. Growin' Up ~ Ice Cube
14. Click, Clack-Get Back! ~ Ice Cube
15. Game Lord, The ~ Ice Cube
16. Chrome & Paint - (with WC) ~ Ice Cube
17. Steal The Show ~ Ice Cube
18. You Gotta Lotta That - (with Snoop Dogg) ~ Ice Cube
19. Spittin' Pollaseeds - (featuring WC/Kokane) ~ Ice Cube
20. Holla @ Cha' Boy ~ Ice Cube



The decade following 1992's The Predator found Ice Cube releasing a handful of mediocre albums (none of which lived up to the standards of his first three solo releases) and devoting his time to other activities (including writing and directing films). But 2006's Laugh Now, Cry Later reminded the world that Cube is still one of the most forceful voices in hardcore hip-hop, a game he helped create the rules for.

The guest roster glitters with all-stars, including Snoop Dogg, Dre, and crunk king Lil Jon. Cube's familiar delivery still crackles with fierce intensity, especially on the politically militant album opener "Why We Thugs," which takes the federal government to task for the condition of America's ghettos. Yet the album isn't strictly polemical: "Smoke Some Weed" has a self-explanatory message, and its slinky, Middle Eastern vibe boasts one of the album's best beats. In all, Laugh Now weighs in as Ice Cube's strongest album since The Predator, and underscores the rapper's status as a hip-hop icon.


Track Listings
1. Definition Of A West Coast G
2. Why We Thugs
3. Smoke Some Weed
4. Dimes & Nicks (A Call From Mike Epps)
5. Child Support
6. 2 Decades Ago
7. Doin' What It 'Pose 2Do
8. Laugh Now, Cry Later
9. Stop Snitchin'
10. Go To Church - (with Snoop Dogg/Lil Jon)
11. N**a Trapp, The
12. A History Of Violence
13. Growin' Up
14. Click, Click-Get Back!
15. The Game Lord
16. Chrome & Paint - (with WC)
17. Steal The Show
18. You Gotta Lotta That - (with Snoop Dogg)
19. Spittin' Pollaseeds - (with WC/Kokane)
20. Holla @ cha Boy

 

Album Notes and Credits

Notes & Personnel Info
Photographer: Eric Williams.
The decade following 1992's THE PREDATOR found Ice Cube releasing a handful of mediocre albums (none of which lived up to the standards of his first three solo releases) and devoting his time to other activities (including writing and directing films). But 2006's LAUGH NOW, CRY LATER reminded the world that Cube is still one of the most forceful voices in hardcore hip-hop, a game he helped create the rules for.
The guest roster glitters with all-stars, including Snoop Dogg, Dre, and crunk king Lil Jon. Cube's familiar delivery still crackles with fierce intensity, especially on the politically militant album opener "Why We Thugs," which takes the federal government to task for the condition of America's ghettos. Yet the album isn't strictly polemical: "Smoke Some Weed" has a self-explanatory message, and its slinky, Middle Eastern vibe boasts one of the album's best beats. In all, LAUGH NOW weighs in as Ice Cube's strongest album since THE PREDATOR, and underscores the rapper's status as a hip-hop icon.
As Ice Cube's 2006 Laugh Now, Cry Later was landing in stores, all the chatter was about whether or not Cube was back, and whether or not he could recover from a couple of lackluster solo albums that came out years ago. Did his major contribution to Westside Connection's satisfying 2003 album Terrorist Threats slip everybody's mind and do we have to consider that release "slept on"? Laugh Now picks up right where Terrorist Threats left off, and while Cube does a little "this is why I'm important" posturing on the excellent "Child Support," this isn't a forced "I'm back" effort in the least. After a short intro, Cube goes right for the upper classes' throats with "Guns and Drugs," a track that acknowledges that there was a George Bush in office when he began his solo career, there's a George Bush in office as he returns to it, and he doesn't much care for either. Switching gears, the following club track "Smoke Some Weed" gives everyone the finger in a much less socially conscious manner. The track's rain stick and East Indian vocal loops constructed by producer Budda give the album its most riveting beat, the competition supplied by various upstarts and, surprisingly, Lil Jon, who upstages the heralded Scott Storch and his underwhelming contributions. Lil Jon tweaks his usual crunk juice and blends some West into his South for the low-riding "Go to Church" and "You Gotta Lotta That," both with Snoop. Just as satisfying, "Doin' What It 'Pose 2 Do" is a modern banger that's well aware of the 2006 success of folks like Bun B and Z-Ro. It's only when Cube jumps on the "Stop Snitchin'" bandwagon that he sounds the least bit unnatural. He also scores a lyrical triumph with the title track, but unlike his early classics, Laugh Now stumbles occasionally and fails to keep the momentum going through the whole fourth quarter. This is his first effort on his own independent label, so if the album lacks a little final product-minded polish, it trades it for a homegrown feel that's distinctively direct. Strip a couple redundant tracks and you've got that bitter, edgy, and sharp Cube album you hoped for. [Laugh Now, Cry Later was also made available in a clean version, with all explicit material removed.] ~ David Jeffries

Producer: Dee 'Underdue'; L.V.; Lil Jon; Scott Storch; Swizz Beatz

Musical Guests
Snoop Dogg
Lil Jon
Kokane
WC

 
Compilation Appearances
Short Dog's In The House (Explicit Version)
Strictly 4 My N.i.g.g.a.z.(Explicit Version)
Murder Was The Case (Explicit Version)
Friday (Explicit Version)
Mack 10 (Explicit Version)
Greatest Funkin' Hits (Explicit Version)
Death Row's Greatest Hits (Explicit Version)
Based On A True Story (Explicit Version)
Gang Related (Explicit Version)
Born Again (Explicit Version)
Shadiest One (Explicit Version)
Ruthless For Life (Explicit Version)
Follow The Leader (Explicit Version)
Office Space (Explicit Version)
Recipe (Explicit Version)
Players Club (Explicit Version)
Section 8 (Explicit Version)
Loyalty & Betrayal (Explicit Version)
Tha Last Meal (Explicit Version)
Save The Last Dance
Bang Or Ball (Explicit Version)
Blade II (Explicit Version)
Bunkka
Lay It Down (Explicit Version)
xXx
N.w.a Legacy 2 (Explicit Version)
Greatest Hits (Bonus Tracks) (Explicit Version)
Diary (Explicit Version)
My Homies (Explicit Version)
Untouchable (Explicit Version)
Scarface-Music Inspired By (Explicit Version)
Untouchable (Explicit Version)
Fabric Live 17
xXx: State of the Union (Explicit Version)
Wild Nights 4 (w/ Bonus DVD)
Ministry Of Sounds: Big Tunes 2 (en
Boyz In The Hood
Friday:20th Anniversary Edition (Explicit Version)
My Homies Vol. 2 (Explicit Version)
Wicked Wayz (chopped & Screwed)
My Homies Part 2 (Explicit Version)
MY HOMIES 2(Explicit Version)
Cali Iz Active (Explicit Version)
Cali Iz Active (Clean Version)
Death Row's Greatest Hits: Chronicles(Explicit Version)
Death Row's Greatest Hits: Chronicles (Cln)
Murder Was The Case: Soundtrack (Bonus Dvd) ((w/ Bonus DVD)
Death Row's 15th Anniversary(w/ Bonus DVD)(Explicit Version)
Death Row's 15th Anniversary
Blue Carpet Treatment (Explicit Version)
Blue Carpet Treatment (Cln)
West Coast Hip Hop Vs Da South(Explicit Version)
Death Row Archives:soundtracks(Explicit Version)
Bone Box:thugs For Life(Explicit Version)
Back Up N Da Chevy
Back Up N Da Chevy(Explicit Version)
Hip Hop Tribute To Korn(Explicit Version)
Featuring Master P
Old School Hip Hop Jams
Foe Life:best Of Mack 10(Explicit Version)
Fabriclive 39
Harold Kumar Escape From Guantanamo
I Pledge Allegiance To The Grind II (Explicit)
Hip Hop Hits
LAX
Killer(Explicit Version)
LAX (Clean)
LAX (Bonus Tracks)(Explicit Version)
Villain(Explicit Version)
Villain(Explicit Version)
Villain(Explicit Version)
Ghostdeini The Great(Explicit Version)
Blueline Treatment(Explicit Version)
Old School Box Set
Ultimate Death Row Collection(Explicit Version)

 
Technical Info
Release Date : 06/06/2006
Original Release Date : 2006
Catalog ID : 163
Label : Lench Mob
Number of Discs : 1
Studio/Live : Studio
Mono/Stereo : Stereo
SPAR Code : n/a
UPC : 00094636616322

 
Professional Reviews
Rolling Stone (p.104)
- 3 stars out of 5 -- "[A] legit return to politicized gangsta rap, while also feeling like he's simply slipping back into his best-known role....It's Cube's lyrics that go for the throat."

XXL (Magazine)
(p.136)
- "Dusting off his black Raiders cap, Cube lambastes every wanksta within earshot....Cube's knack for self-reflection also serves him well..."

Mojo (Publisher)
(p.90)
- 3 stars out of 5 -- "[He] proves he still has sufficient desire to make angry, focused music....The vocals bristle with lip-curled sneers and contemptuous snorts."

  
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