Bestsellers > Music > West Coast
|
|
Buy Now |
1218, Pt. 2(more) »rank: 10648by: Lil Rob
:Album Description:Explicit Version. Twelve Eighteen, Pt. 2 is an album by Chicano rapper Lil Rob who debuted as an artist in 1997, selling as many as 200,000 units for each independent CD he recorded. The number Twelve Eighteen, which is tattooed on Lil Rob's arms, represent the numeric value of the letters L and R, respectively, which are Lil Rob's initials. |
Buy Now |
Better Dayz(more) »rank: 21024by: 2Pac
: :2Pac's been dead for more than six years, and in that time his estate has released a dizzying array of questionable posthumous material--with much more to come in 2003, by the way (the liner notes list documentary soundtracks, another unreleased double album, DVDs, etc.). On the first disc's 'Intro,' an unnamed street reporter wonders, 'Where are these songs coming from?' After repeated listens, your best guess would be from his unfinished studio outtakes. Nevertheless, these tracks were apparently recorded during his prolific, vexed Makaveli stage. 'When We Ride on Our Enemies' demonstrates much vitriol, as Pac's verses are littered with fightin' words for ... |
Buy Now |
Loc-ed After Dark(more) »rank: 30459by: Tone-Loc
: :2Pac's been dead for more than six years, and in that time his estate has released a dizzying array of questionable posthumous material--with much more to come in 2003, by the way (the liner notes list documentary soundtracks, another unreleased double album, DVDs, etc.). On the first disc's 'Intro,' an unnamed street reporter wonders, 'Where are these songs coming from?' After repeated listens, your best guess would be from his unfinished studio outtakes. Nevertheless, these tracks were apparently recorded during his prolific, vexed Makaveli stage. 'When We Ride on Our Enemies' demonstrates much vitriol, as Pac's verses are littered with fightin' words for ... |
Buy Now |
It's On (Dr. Dre) 187um Killa(more) »rank: 40014by: Eazy-E
: :2Pac's been dead for more than six years, and in that time his estate has released a dizzying array of questionable posthumous material--with much more to come in 2003, by the way (the liner notes list documentary soundtracks, another unreleased double album, DVDs, etc.). On the first disc's 'Intro,' an unnamed street reporter wonders, 'Where are these songs coming from?' After repeated listens, your best guess would be from his unfinished studio outtakes. Nevertheless, these tracks were apparently recorded during his prolific, vexed Makaveli stage. 'When We Ride on Our Enemies' demonstrates much vitriol, as Pac's verses are littered with fightin' words for ... |
Buy Now |
Doctor's Advocate(more) »rank: 41878by: The Game
: :Despite having parted ways with former mentors 50 Cent and Dr. Dre, The Game’s follow-up to 2005's multiplatinum The Documentary doesn’t suggest he’s suffered much at their absence. The same basic elements are still here: a breathtakingly cocky attitude (he repeatedly insists that he’s on the same level as Jay-Z, Biggie, Nas, and 2Pac); versatile production by Just Blaze, Will.I.Am, Kanye West, Scott Storch, and others that should play well in the car, clubs, and earbuds; and an unabashed celebration of regionalism that may please those on the West Coast (though who knows how it will play elsewhere). The problem however is that ... |
Buy Now |
Greatest Hits(more) »rank: 13871by: Cypress Hill
:Album Description:Greatest Hits From The Bong features the hits 'Insane In The Brain', 'Dr. Greenthumb', '(Rock) Superstar' and 'Latin Thugs'. Columbia. 2005. |
Buy Now |
Tupac - The Complete Live Performances(more) »rank: 15912starring: Tupac Shakur
:Description:This special two-disc set brings together the only two live performances by Tupac Shakur that were ever filmed. The House Of Blues show from 1996 was released as a stand alone DVD last year, and is now combined in this set with the never before seen show from Club 662 in Las Vegas, also filmed in 1996 on the day of his release from prison. In contrast to the many 'story of' DVDs of Tupac available, this set is the definitive live experience of Tupac at his very best in front of a live audience. Tracklisting Disc One - House of Blues 1. ... |
Buy Now |
Cypress Hill III: Temples of Boom(more) »rank: 15119by: Cypress Hill
: :Four years since the L.A. group's first pro-pot anthem, 'Stoned Is the Way of the Walk,' Cypress Hill is still telling us they love to smoke ganja. How B-Real and Sen Dog waste their days is their business, but it makes you wonder: What's wrong with their personal lives that they need to be stoned all the time? And how can they be so enthusiastic about it? III (Temples of Boom) exhales the same clouded sentiments of past albums, but offers no answers. Herb is never far from the conversation on Cypress Hill records--how they smoke more than anyone, how they were rapping ... |
Buy Now |
MC Hammer - Greatest Hits(more) »rank: 14188by: MC Hammer
: :Four years since the L.A. group's first pro-pot anthem, 'Stoned Is the Way of the Walk,' Cypress Hill is still telling us they love to smoke ganja. How B-Real and Sen Dog waste their days is their business, but it makes you wonder: What's wrong with their personal lives that they need to be stoned all the time? And how can they be so enthusiastic about it? III (Temples of Boom) exhales the same clouded sentiments of past albums, but offers no answers. Herb is never far from the conversation on Cypress Hill records--how they smoke more than anyone, how they were rapping ... |
Buy Now |
The Don Killuminati: The 7 Day Theory(more) »rank: 28840by: Makaveli
: :For this release, Tupac Shakur adopted the pseudonym 'Makaveli' in honor of the philosopher Machiavelli, author of the devious politician's handbook The Prince. Contractually his final effort for Death Row, it was recorded in seven days and was released on schedule in October 1996, despite Shakur's death a month earlier. Shakur was unparalleled at balancing the upbeat and the morbidly grim, and tracks like 'Toss It Up' are such wonderfully catchy pop songs that the nasty lyrical digs at his then-current crop of enemies seem almost subliminal. Not so with album closer 'Against All Odds,' in which Shakur spells out very explicitly who ... |

