Wednesday, 23 March 2011
Nate Dogg - Music and Me (2001)
Last Tuesday, March the 15th, the world has lost a very colourful figure. A person who managed to introduce a new quality to the hip-hop culture by leading a completely new path. His unique approach to music, his great voice and great songs helped forge a whole new identity for the west-coast scene. Along other artists, he was responsible for crafting a unique sound - the G-Funk sound.
Nate was always involved in the west-coast scene. He made guest appearances on dozens of songs, working with artists such as: Xzibit, Ludacris, Dr.Dre, Snoop Dogg, Warren G, Tupac, Tha Dogg Pound, etc. Adding Nate's voice singing that little hook always sweetened up a tune and gave it that one-of-a-kind feeling. These collaborations gave us such great songs as: Ludacris' 'Area Codes', Warren G's 'Regulate' and Dre's 'Deeez Nuuuts', among others.
Apart from that, Nate, with his cousin Snoop Dogg, and Warren G, formed in 2004 the famous trio: 213. The group released only one full album: 'The Hard Way', but it was a hell of a release. It featured such great tracks as: 'Groupie Luv', 'Gotta Find a Way' or 'Mary Jane'. Again, it proved that Nate, with the reinforcement of a couple of friends, can make great music.
As for the 'Music and Me' album...Here, Nate has a leading role, being the main actor for most of the songs and occasionally asking his friends to return the favour and make a guest appearance on his album. Therefore, apart from Nate Dizzle the release showcases a bunch of fantastic artists: Dr.Dre, Kurupt, Xzibit, Ludacris and Snoop Dogg.
'Music and Me', Nate's second solo production, is everything you would expect from a top-notch G-Funk album - 'low-rider' beats with a prominent bassline and rather sparse percussion arrangements, heavily-synthesized melodies, the odd pizzicato string here and there and of course Nate's soulful vocals (occasionally reinforced by female backing vocals). The lyrics are the industry standards, really. However, in my opinion, the album benefited from the guest appearances - guys like Kurupt or Xz drop some seriously sick lines. All in all I believe it's a fantastic album.
If you listen to the songs below, you'll know straight away why it was such a huge blow for black music to lose a quality artist like Nate Dogg. Anyways, I'm sure he's Keeping it G.A.N.G.S.T.A. in a better place now...RIP
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