| Product Summary | | Label: Koch Entertainment Dist | | UPC: 00728706306522 | | Release Date: 7/11/2006 | | Buy.com Sku: 202717383 | | Item#: M32RWX | Format: CD |
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| Song Listing |  |
Disc 1
| | Song Title | Sample | | 1. Murder Was The Case - (remix) ~ Snoop Doggy Dogg |  | | 2. Natural Born Killaz - (with Dr. Dre/Ice Cube) ~ Snoop Doggy Dogg |  | | 3. What Would U Do? - (with Tha Dogg Pound) ~ Snoop Doggy Dogg |  | | 4. 21 Jumpstreel - (with Tray Deee) ~ Snoop Doggy Dogg |  | | 5. One More Day - (with Nate Dogg) ~ Snoop Doggy Dogg |  | | 6. Harvest For the World - (with Jewell) ~ Snoop Doggy Dogg |  | | 7. Who Got Some Gangsta Shit - (with Tha Dogg Pound) ~ Snoop Doggy Dogg |  | | 8. Come When I Call - (with Danny Boy) ~ Snoop Doggy Dogg |  | | 9. U Better Recognize - (with Sam Sneed/Dr. Dre) ~ Snoop Doggy Dogg |  | | 10. Come up to My Room - (with Jodeci/Tha Dogg Pound) ~ Snoop Doggy Dogg |  | | 11. Woman to Woman - (with Jewell) ~ Snoop Doggy Dogg |  | | 12. Dollars & Sense - (with DJ Quick) ~ Snoop Doggy Dogg |  | | 13. Eulogy, The - (with Slip Capone & CPO) ~ Snoop Doggy Dogg |  | | 14. Horny - (with B. Rezell) ~ Snoop Doggy Dogg |  | | 15. Eastside-Westside - (with Young Soldierz) ~ Snoop Doggy Dogg |  |
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| | Album Notes and Credits | Notes & Personnel Info |  | Producers include: Dr. Dre, Dat Nigga Daz, Priest "Superfly" Brooks, D.J. Quik, Sam Sneed. |  | Engineers: Kesden Wright, Tommy D. Daugherty, Danny Alonso. |  | All tracks have been digitally remastered. |  | Tha Dogg Pound's "What Would U Do" was nominated for a 1996 Grammy Award for Best Rap Performance By A Duo Or Group. |  | MURDER WAS THE CASE is the soundtrack to an 18-minute film directed by Dr. Dre and starring Snoop Doggy Dogg. |  | Engineers include: Tommy D. Daugherty, Danny Alonso, Hesden Wright. |  | All tracks have been digitally remastered. |  | Personnel: Snoop Dogg (rap vocals); Jodeci (vocals); Dr. Dre, Ice Cube, Tha Dogg Pound (rap vocals). |  | The soundtrack to an 18-minute film inspired by Snoop Doggy Dogg's "Murder Was the Case" provides more thrills than the average hip-hop release. Again, Dre relies on his standard production tricks and crew, introducing a couple of new members to the mix. But the result sounds anything but stale -- it ranks alongside The Chronic, Doggystyle and Above the Rim in terms of quality. In fact, various-artist compilations like Murder Was the Case are the ideal vehicle for Dr. Dre -- they show his versatility. Murder has the harrowing title track from Snoop Dogg, as well as the smooth funk of Warren G and the chilling hardcore of "Natural Born Killaz," the first track from Dre's collaboration with Ice Cube. At some point, Dre will need to find some new tricks, but Murder Was the Case finds him at the top of his game. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine |  | MURDER WAS THE CASE began as a Snoop Doggy Dog video, and was gradually extended into a feature-length video and soundtrack. Pound for pound (dogg pound, that is), this is a definitive anthology of beats and raps. |  | Even those cuts not directly produced and mixed under the auspices of Dr. Dre bear his stylistic signature. Most cuts reflect Dr. Dre's love for phat, mello grooves and a sweet, soulful keyboard pad; it's a kind of Compton meets Funkadelic thang, in which the rawest, most fervent raps vie for center stage with serpentine synthesizer counterpoint that shades the lead voice and goads on the speaker with melodic give and take (such as Snoop & Tha Dogg Pound's "Who Got Some Gangsta Shit?" with its dope bass vamp and flute-like synth accompaniment). |  | Dr. Dre and Ice Cube team up for the gangsta realism of "Natural Born Killaz," setting a hardcore wild west tone for MURDER WAS THE CASE (as summed up by Slip Capone on "The Eulogy"--"It's a cold world/Niggaz got to provide their own heat"), while Nate Dogg delivers a more poignant narrative of family and survival on "One More Day" ("If I live to see tomorrow/Thank you for one more day"). On the ballad and laid-back front, there's a decidedly carnal "Horny" by B-Rezell, a sassy "Woman To Woman" by Jewell, and the head hound hisself, Snoop Doggy Dogg (with Tray Deee) on "21 Jumpstreet." | Musical Guests |  | Dr. Dre |  | Ice Cube |  | Jodeci |
| | Associated Artists and Works |
| | Technical Info |  | Release Date : 07/11/2006 |  | Original Release Date : 1994 |  | Catalog ID : 0652 |  | Label : Death Row (USA) |  | Number of Discs : 1 |  | Studio/Live : Studio |  | Mono/Stereo : Stereo |  | SPAR Code : n/a |  | UPC : 00728706306522 |
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| | Professional Reviews | | Rolling Stone (12/29/94-1/12/95, p.178) - "...[It] isn't the trailblazer that Dre's THE CHRONIC was last year. But it is rap very nearly as strong. Featuring West Coast stalwarts...and new discoveries..., Dre and Dat Nigga Daz present gangsta- and R&B-infected fare that slams..."Entertainment Weekly (11/11/94, p.76) - "...confirms...Dr. Dre as the new king of pop. In addition to the ominous remix of Snoop's title song, Dre reunites with Ice Cube...Dre's G-funk sound may be the hardest in the land, but it's also the most gut-wrenchingly soulful..." - Rating: A Q (1/95, p.258) - 3 Stars - Good - "...While most ears will be tuned to the bile'n'beats of `Natural Born Killaz'...the best track here is from Snoop's young protege, Nate Dogg....One of West Coast rap's more imaginative albums." The Source (1/95, p.85) - 4 Stars - Slammin' - "...while Jodeci duets with Tha Dogg Pound and an all-star cast to try their hand at the G-Funk sound, Dre begins plotting his next move...heavy-metal bass meets chunky keyboards..." NME (Magazine) (12/24/94, p.23) - Ranked #8 in NME's list of the 10 best compilation albums of 1994. NME (Magazine) (10/15/94, p.53) - 7 - Very Good - "...anyone expecting this to signal Dre's decline is kidding themselves. MURDER WAS THE CASE shows the old dogg has plenty of new tricks..." |
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