Loyal To The Game (Explicit Version) (2004)

Artist: 2pac
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Product Summary
Label: Universal Music Group
UPC: 00075021032910
Release Date: 12/14/2004
Buy.com Sku: 63923429
Item#: MYPK6Q
Buy.com Sales Rank: 25050
Format:  CD

Song Listing

Disc 1
Song TitleSample
1. Soldier Like Me (A.K.A. Return of the Soulja) - (with Tupac/Eminem) ~ 2Pac
2. Uppercut, The - (with Tupac/EDI/Noble) ~ 2Pac
3. Out On Bail - (with Tupac) ~ 2Pac
4. Ghetto Gospel - (with Tupac) ~ 2Pac
5. Black Cotton - (with Tupac/Eminem/Kastro/Noble) ~ 2Pac
6. Loyal To The Game - (with Tupac/G-Unit) ~ 2Pac
7. Thugs Get Lonely Too - (with Tupac/Nate Dogg) ~ 2Pac
8. N.I.G.G.A. - (with Tupac/Jadakiss) ~ 2Pac
9. Who Do You Love? - (with Tupac) ~ 2Pac
10. Crooked Nigga Too - (with Tupac) ~ 2Pac
11. Don't You Trust Me - (with Tupac) ~ 2Pac
12. Hennessey - (with Tupac/Obie Trice) ~ 2Pac
13. Thug 4 Life - (with Tupac) ~ 2Pac
14. Po Nigga Blues - (Scott Storch remix, with Tupac/Ron Isley) ~ 2Pac
15. Hennessey - (Red Spyda remix, with Tupac/EDI/Sleepy Brown) ~ 2Pac
16. Crooked Nigga Too - (Raphael Saadiq remix, with Tupac) ~ 2Pac
17. Loyal To The Game - (DJ Quik remix, with Tupac/Big Syke) ~ 2Pac

(P) 2004 Interscope Records
(C) 2004 Interscope Records

2Pac Loyal To The Game includes the lead single "Thugs Get Lonely Too" in addition to 11 other previously unreleased songs and 4 bonus tracks. Featured Artists include 50 Cent, Jadakiss, Lloyd Banks, Nate Dogg, Obie Trice, Outlawz, Ron Isley, Sleepy Brown, and Young Buck.
 
Album Notes and Credits

Notes & Personnel Info
Personnel: 2Pac (rap vocals); Ronald Isley, Sleepy Brown (vocals); Edi, Eminem, G-Unit, Jadakiss, Nate Dogg, Noble, Obie Trice, Big Syke (rap vocals).
Loyal to the Game, the ninth 2Pac album released by his enterprising mother-turned-executive producer, Afeni Shakur, is one of the more unique entries in the martyred rap legend's extensive catalog. Produced entirely by Eminem, it carries on with the approach the man otherwise known as Marshall Mathers took with his production contributions to the preceding year's Tupac: Resurrection. Eminem had produced a few songs on that soundtrack, most notably the landmark 2Pac-Biggie duet "Runnin' (Dying to Live)," and his work here on Loyal to the Game isn't too much of a departure from the style of that song. In the wake of the song's popularity, Afeni gave Eminem some old tapes, and he went to work, stripping them of their productions, giving them his own trademark backing (characterized by his style of punchy, syncopated, unfunky beatmaking), incorporating some guest raps for secondary verses, and polishing them off with various sorts of hooks. Eminem's efforts here work, yet aren't ideal. On the one hand, there's no questioning Em's integrity. He pens some reverent liner notes, explaining his position (or justifying it, depending on your viewpoint), and Afeni also pens some touching liners, likewise explaining why Eminem of all people gets the green light to produce this album in its entirety. And Em doesn't take his job here lightly. His beats hit hard and are well crafted, most similar to his more hardcore self-productions like "Mosh" or "Lose Yourself." His hooks are also well crafted: he takes the hook himself on "Soldier Like Me"; brings in 50 Cent and Nate Dogg for "Loyal to the Game" and "Thugs Get Lonely Too," respectively; samples Elton John ("Indian Sunset"), Curtis Mayfield ("If There's a Hell Below"), and Dido ("Do You Have a Little Time") for other songs; and lets 2Pac handle his own hooks elsewhere.
On the other, more cynical hand, Eminem simply isn't a good fit, and the four bonus tracks here testify to what could have been. Produced by Scott Storch, Red Spyda, Raphael Saadiq, and DJ Quik, these bonus track "remixes" are clearly the highlights of the album (and quite fantastic highlights at that, perhaps alone reason enough to pick up this album). These guys produce beats much more fitting to 2Pac's rhyme style. Sure, Eminem is a great producer, but he produces these 2Pac tracks as if he were producing himself, and 2Pac is a much different breed of rapper than Slim Shady, especially in terms of cadence and delivery. This is all the more evident because the source tapes of these tracks date back to the early '90s, when 2Pac was at his funkiest and least hardcore. (While the dates aren't provided in the credits, the original producers are credited: Randy "Stretch" Walker, DJ Daryl, Live Squad, and Deon Evans, all of whom worked with Pac during his early years, namely the early '90s, just as he was leaving Digital Underground and getting his career off the ground. Various time-specific references within Pac's lyrics are further evidence of this, such as passing references to the L.A. riots.) How much Loyal to the Game ultimately appeals to you will likely depend on how much you like Eminem. After all, this is as much his album as 2Pac's -- a labor of love, no doubt. If you're fond of his lock-step beatmaking and big hooks, you'll find much to like here, for Pac's rhymes are undoubtedly fascinating in any context, even at this early stage of his career. But if you're not down with Marshall Mathers, you'll probably want to pass this one by, though the four bonus tracks alone might make this a worthwhile venture regardless. ~ Jason Birchmeier
Loyal to the Game, the ninth 2Pac album released by his enterprising mother-turned-executive producer, Afeni Shakur, is one of the more unique entries in the martyred rap legend's extensive catalog. Produced entirely by Eminem, it carries on with the approach the man otherwise known as Marshall Mathers took with his production contributions to the preceding year's Tupac: Resurrection. Eminem had produced a few songs on that soundtrack, most notably the landmark 2Pac-Biggie duet "Runnin' (Dying to Live)," and his work here on Loyal to the Game isn't too much of a departure from the style of that song. In the wake of that song's popularity, Afeni gave Eminem some old tapes, and he went to work, stripping them of their productions, giving them his own trademark backing (characterized by his style of punchy, syncopated, unfunky beatmaking), incorporating some guest raps for secondary verses, and polishing them off with various sorts of hooks. Eminem's efforts here work, even if they aren't ideal. On the one hand, there's no questioning Em's integrity. He pens some reverent liner notes, explaining his position (or justifying it, depending on your viewpoint), and Afeni also pens some touching liners, likewise explaining why Eminem of all people gets the green light to produce this album in its entirety. And Em doesn't take his job here lightly. His beats hit hard and are well crafted, most similar to his more hardcore self-productions like "Mosh" or "Lose Yourself." His hooks are also well crafted: he takes the hook himself on "Soldier Like Me"; brings in 50 Cent and Nate Dogg for "Loyal to the Game" and "Thugs Get Lonely Too," respectively; samples Elton John ("Indian Sunset"), Curtis Mayfield ("If There's a Hell Below"), and Dido ("Do You Have a Little Time") for other songs; and lets 2Pac handle his own hooks elsewhere.
On the other, more cynical hand, Eminem simply isn't a good fit, and the four bonus tracks here testify to what could have been. Produced by Scott Storch, Red Spyda, Raphael Saadiq, and DJ Quik, these bonus track "remixes" are clearly the highlights of the album (and quite fantastic highlights at that, perhaps alone reason enough to pick up this album). These guys produce beats much more fitting to 2Pac's rhyme style. Sure, Eminem is a great producer, but he produces these 2Pac tracks as if he were producing himself, and 2Pac is a much different breed of rapper than Slim Shady, especially in terms of cadence and delivery. This is all the more evident because the source tapes of these tracks date back to the early '90s, when 2Pac was at his funkiest and least hardcore. (While the dates aren't provided in the credits, the original producers are credited: Randy "Stretch" Walker, DJ Daryl, Live Squad, and Deon Evans, all of whom worked with Pac during his early years, namely the early '90s, just as he was leaving Digital Underground and getting his career off the ground. Various time-specific references within Pac's lyrics are further evidence of this, such as passing references to the L.A. riots.) How much Loyal to the Game ultimately appeals to you will likely depend on how much you like Eminem. After all, this is as much his album as 2Pac's -- a labor of love, no doubt. If you're fond of his lock-step beatmaking and big hooks, you'll find much to like here, for Pac's rhymes are undoubtedly fascinating in any context, even at this early stage of his career. ~ Jason Birchmeier
Dozens of posthumous releases have been culled from 2Pac's archives, both by his mother, Afeni Shakur, and by more dubious sources. Eight years after the conflicted poet/thug's death comes LOYAL TO THE GAME, featuring more untapped rhymes. These recordings are the latest unearthed by Ms. Shakur, and while it might be easy to dismiss yet another new collection, two things work in the album's favor. The tapes were handed over to hip-hop icon Eminem, providing a completely unique angle on 2Pac's rhymes. More importantly, while these offerings are late in coming, that is not to say 2Pac's mother is desperately peddling the dregs of his output; the lyrics on LOYAL TO THE GAME are razor-sharp.
Eminem's trademarked heavily syncopated sound provides an almost surreal sheen to the proc

 
Compilation Appearances
Above The Rim (Explicit Version)
Tha Hall Of Game (Explicit Version)
In A Major Way (Explicit Version)
Show (Explicit Version)
Best Of Mc Breed (Explicit Version)
Death Row's Greatest Hits (Explicit Version)
Gridlock'd (Explicit Version)
Art Of War (Explicit Version)
Gang Related (Explicit Version)
Retaliation Revenge & Get Back (Explicit Version)
Mtv Party To Go Platinum Mix
Vol. 2-Hip Hop Hits (Explicit Version)
Full Time Hustlin (Explicit Version)
Tunnel (Explicit Version)
Vol. 2-Collection (Explicit Version) (Bonus Tracks)
Vol. 2-Collection (Clean Version) (Bonus Tracks)
Old School Funkin Hip Hop 2
Chopped & Screwed (Explicit Version)
My Homies (Explicit Version)
Untouchable (Explicit Version)
World Of Black Tracks
Greatest Hits (Bonus Tracks) (Explicit Version)
Last Temptation (Explicit Version)
More Music From 8 Mile (Explicit Version)
God's Son (Explicit Version)
Thug Love-Swishahouse Mix (Explicit Version)
Source Presents: hip Hop Hits Vol. 7
Against The Grain
Hip Hop Box (Explicit Version)
Untouchable (Explicit Version)
Best Of Yesterday Today & Tomorrow (Explicit Version)
Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas Official Soundtrack (Explicit Version)
Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas (w/ Bonus DVD) (Explicit Version)
Black Music
Very Best Of Death Row
Very Best Of Death Row (Explicit Version)
Duets: The Final Chapter (Explicit Version)
Duets:the Final Cha(clean
Very Best Of Death Row (DIG) (ENH)
Death Row's Greatest Hits: Chronicles(Explicit Version)
Death Row's Greatest Hits: Chronicles (Cln)
This Is Gangsta Rap (w/Bonus DVD)(w/ Bonus DVD)
Death Row's 15th Anniversary(w/ Bonus DVD)(Explicit Version)
Death Row's 15th Anniversary
Freedom Writers (Explicit Version)
Death Row Archives:soundtracks(Explicit Version)
Death Row Ghetto Mix / Various (Cln)
How A Thug Was Born (clean Version, C
Life Goes On(Explicit Version)
Mo Thugs Soldiers(Explicit Version)
Life Goes On (chopped Screwed)(Explicit Version)
Left Side Vol 1(Explicit Version)
I'm So Hood
Against Everything(Explicit Version)
Rap A Lot Greatest Hits
A Different Me
Thuggin Without A Cause(Explicit Version)
Cholo Skate
Ultimate Death Row Collection(Explicit Version)

 
Associated Artists and Works
Artists, Various
The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory [PA] ~ Don Killuminati
Don Killuminati
The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory [PA] ~ Don Killuminati
Don Killuminati
The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory ~ Don Killuminati
The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory [PA] [Digipa ~ Don Killuminati
Don Killuminati
Funky Aztecs
Tupac: Resurrection [Original Soundtrack] [PA] ~ Original Soundtrack
Tupac: Resurrection [Original Soundtrack] [Edited] ~ Original Soundtrack
Scarface
Sure!, Al B.
Sure!, Al B.
Trapp
Trapp
Trapp
Various Artists
Various Artists
Various Artists

 
Technical Info
Release Date : 12/14/2004
Original Release Date : 2004
Catalog ID : 0003861
Label : Interscope Records (USA)
Number of Discs : 1
Studio/Live : Studio
Mono/Stereo : Stereo
SPAR Code : n/a
UPC : 00075021032910

 
Professional Reviews
Vibe (pp.137-138)
- 3 1/2 discs out of 5 - "Arguably the strongest of 2Pac's posthumous LPs..."

  
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