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23 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Engagingly beautiful; a hip-hop masterpiece., November 19, 1999
By A Customer
This is the greatest hip-hop album ever. Kurupt is a lyrical genius, his poetic lines are unbelieveable. The thing that makes Kurupt's lyrical style so amazing is that he has the ability to paint a picture inside your mind. That keeps you listening, and his fiery personality makes this album anabashed fun. The tracks on this album are so beautifully honest; it's what makes Kurupt a master of the art of hip-hop. All of the tracks are groundbreaking, and you can enjoy all of them because Kurupt put his heart and soul into them. Also, it's great to hear him with Daz again, even though Kurupt was great without him, they are a duo made in heaven. All of the Dogg Pound members show up on this album: Snoop Doggy Dogg, Soopafly, Daz Dillinger, Tray D, Warren G and Nate Dogg all drop in for The Streetz Iz A Mutha.The highlight tracks on this album include the jazzy "I Call Shots", with it's amazing Organized Noise produced beat, "Loose Cannons", in which Kurupt makes his own version of a Hollywood bank robbery, and the police don't exactly come out on top, the party track "Who Ride With Us" features Daz and is a great summertime track, "Represent That G.C.", where Kurupt joins partners Daz Dillinger, Soopafly, Tray D, Snoop Doggy Dogg (who does a very playful verse) and Jayo Felony, for a bouncy Long Beach track, the beautiful "Welcome Home", in which Kurupt paints a fantastic lyrical picture and has terrific keyboard trills, "Trilogy", a string-laced track with a classical vibe to it, brought by borrowing from a Brahms piece, "Never Gonna Give It Up", a quintessential Dogg Pound track, with Snoop Doggy Dogg, Warren G, Tray D, Nate Dogg and Soopafly, one of the best tracks, "The Streetz Iz A Mutha", which features Daz, as Kurupt takes a solemn look at the streets over a beat laced by a bass clarinet and keyboards, "It Ain't About You", a classic track with great rhymes by Kurupt, Soopafly and Tray D, the excellent first single "Girls All Pause", which features Nate Dogg adding his musical magic, and keyboard trills, "Your Girlfriend", one of those 'I've been making love to your girlfriend' type songs. It is in a similar format to Eightball's "My Homeboys Girlfriend". The remix of "Housewife", Kurupt's great track from his second album, Kuruption, done by Dr. Dre, features Dr. Dre himself and his discovery Hitman, for a remix even better than the original, which was produced by Kurupt himself, "I Ain't Nothin' Without My Homeboys", another great Dogg Pound track, dedicated to all their homies, "Live On The Mic", a very special bonus track, which features KRS-One, as they freestyle over a bouncy piano track, and finally, "Callin' Out Names", where Kurupt ostrisizes DMX, Ruff Ryders family, Ja Rule, his ex-girlfriend Foxy Brown and Nas. Apparently Kurupt dissed DMX for stealing Foxy, and Foxy for dumping him, Nas for talking about him in the magazines. Kurupt mainly directed this song toward DMX, and Kurupt, being an experienced emcee disser, as he's dissed B.G. Knocc Out & Dresta ("One By One"), Eazy-E ("What Would You Do?"), and now The Ruff Ryders, bascially eats DMX alive, making DMX, who claims in many of his songs to be the hardest man in hip-hop, look like a panzy. All of the tracks were groundbreaking, and I enjoyed all of them. To conclude this review, I recommend this to anyone who likes West Coast, even if you're a Death Row fan, this is a lot like it, so you might want to get this.
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