When was 50 cents last album released




















Hot Songs. Billboard Top Videos. Top Articles. By Carl Lamarre. Copied to clipboard. Click to copy. Artists Mentioned. Sign up for the newsletter Hot new music in your inbox Get music updates weekly so you don't miss a thing. Thanks for signing up! Check your inbox for a welcome email. Email required. By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Notice and European users agree to the data transfer policy.

The latest. I know that clap and kick. And I think that was on one of the. It was supposed to be a D12 beat. It was just nerdy producer shit. We did a sit down that I have on video tape. We went through 30 tracks that 50 did. All in this room. It was like a library with a nice sound system and we all in there playing all the records.

Records was getting chopped off. I was having problems getting that cleared. This was the last record he approved. That was a track where 50 came to the crib with it and he was like I got this joint.

He had the whole song and we recorded it in my basement. Em made that mix really tight and put all the sound effects on it.

He made it a movie. Digga: I created the beat probably two or three years before it was released on an album. This was around the time we started putting together Dipset. That was actually one of the first tracks we started working on for the first Dipset album. He was working on his album and the Bravehearts album. He picked two tracks and that was one of them. Nas recorded to it and one of the Bravehearts. I was focused on making beats for the Dipset album.

It was just finding the sample and trying to make one of the grimiest New York beats possible. I was always thinking of Havoc and Mobb Deep. Just being dark. I was intentionally not trying to sample the main parts of records. I heard the final song over the phone.

It was exactly what I wanted it to be, as far as having that gritty, dirty type feeling. We had like a week with him in the B Room. We was with Banks and Yayo. DeNaun Porter: I first heard it when it came out [laughs] because I was on the road.

I think Dre played it over the phone because I was overseas. Dre had mixed it already and the credits were done. Back then liner notes were so important but a lot of that stuff got screwed up because it went so fast. There is another producer named Branden Parrott , that produced on the song, too. When I first knew that the song was coming the credits were already out and 2 million records had been pushed out.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000