Snoop Dogg - Paid Tha Cost to Be Da Boss [Retail] - 2002


Artist: Snoop Dogg
Album: Paid Tha Cost to Be Da Boss [Retail]
Year: 2002
Genre: Rap
Label: Priority Records
Quality: VBRkbps / 44.1kHz /  Joint Stereo
Group: Recycled_iNT
Rel Date: 11-26-2002
Rip Date: 04-11-2008
Size: 111.5 MB

+/- Click here for Tracklist, Info and DL Link

Tracklist:
| 01 - 00:43 - Don Doggy
| 02 - 01:59 - Da Boss Would Like to See You
| 03 - 04:27 - Stoplight
| 04 - 04:41 - Form the Chuuuch to Da Palacen (Ft. Pharell)
| 05 - 04:34 - I Believe in You (Ft. Latoiya Williams)
| 06 - 03:49 - Lollipop (Ft. Jay-Z, Soopafly & Nate Dogg)
| 07 - 05:19 - Ballin' (Ft. the Dramatic & Lil' Half Dead)
| 08 - 04:58 - Beautiful (Ft. Pharell & Uncle Charlie Wilson)
| 09 - 03:50 - Paper'd Up (Ft. Mr. Kane & Traci Nelson)
| 10 - 04:30 - Wasn't Your Fault
| 11 - 05:53 - Boss Playa
| 12 - 04:20 - Hour Glass (Ft. Mr Kane & Goldie Loc)
| 13 - 03:50 - The One and Only
| 14 - 03:13 - I Miss that Bitch (Ft. E-White)
| 15 - 03:44 - Form Long Beach to Brick City (Ft. Redman, Nate Dogg & Warren G)
| 16 - 03:16 - Suited N Booted
| 17 - 03:37 - You Got What I Want (Ft. Ludacris, Goldie Loc & Uncle Charlie Wilson)
| 18 - 05:03 - Batman & Robin (Ft. Lady of Rage & Rbx)
| 19 - 01:41 - A Message 2 Fat Cuzz
| 20 - 05:42 - Pimp Slapp'd
Playtime: 79:09 min

Notes:
| On PAID THA COST, Snoop Dogg delivers plenty of the kind of
| visceral, sensuous, West Coast G-Funk that we've come to love
| him ... Full Descriptionfor. The most blatant example is
| "Stoplight," which samples and nods to P-Funk's ubiquitous
| "Flashlight," but somehow ends up sounding more like vintage
| Rick James gone hip-hop. Though his vintage beats and loopy
| sense of humor complement that sound perfectly, he doesn't
| leave things at that. The honey-sweet vocals of LaToiya
| Williams lend a melodic, slow-jam R&B flavor to the mellow "I
| Believe in You." A love song from Snoop? Believe it. "Ballin'"
| features the old-school vocal-harmony soul that's always been
| close to Snoop's heart, courtesy of the Dramatics. "From tha
| Chuuuch to Da Palace" ups the humor ante by including a
| lascivious adaptation of "Buffalo Gals." What's curious is that
| the already laid-back Snoop often seems to retreat from the
| spotlight on this album, letting the production and special
| touches occupy the forefront. Perhaps it's just that he's already
| proven himself so thoroughly that he's ready to go where no
| rapper has gone before--egolessness.
|
| S.T.A! Enjoy.

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