Tha Dogg Pound - Dogg Food
Dogg Food is the debut album by the Tha Dogg Pound. Its controversial lyrics were the subject of shareholder protest (the album was supposed to be released in July 1995, as a result of the controversy from Time Warner, the release was delayed for three months). The album spawned two singles -- "Let's Play House" and "New York, New York," featuring Nate Dogg and Snoop Dogg, respectively. It landed on the top of the Billboard 200 chart producing a first-week sales of 277,500 albums. Though it eventually sold over 3 million records (3x platinum), Dogg Food did not equal the success of preceding Death Row Records releases (The Chronic and Doggystyle). It is one of the last high-selling and critically-acclaimed releases from the label, preceding only Tha Doggfather and 2Pac's albums as an anticipated album, and is the last to be produced totally in the G-Funk style pioneered by Dr. Dre. Though formerly the Row's main producer, Dre contributed no production, though he did mix the entire album; Dogg Food led the way for Daz to become the top in-house producer for Death Row until his departure in the late '90s.
1 Intro
2 Dogg Pound Gangstaz
3 Respect
4 New York, New York
5 Smooth
6 Cyco-Lic-No (Bitch Azz Niggaz)
7 Ridin', Slipin', and Slidin
8 Big Pimpin' 2
9 Let's Play House
10 I Don't Like To Dream About Gettin' Paid
11 Do What I Feel
12 If We All Fucc
13 Some Bomb Azz Pussy
14 A Dogg'z Day Afternoon
15 Reality
16 One By One
17 Sooo Much Style
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/4/41/DoggPoundDoggFood.jpg
''It matters not how many times you fall, what matters most is how many times you rise...'' -
T.I.P.
Down-South-Muzik