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Tha Last Meal [LP]
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Tha Last Meal [LP]
Current price: $42.99
Barnes and Noble
Tha Last Meal [LP]
Current price: $42.99
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Size: OS
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Snoop Dogg
leaves much of his gang-banging past behind him in favor of preened pimp posturing on his final album for
No Limit Records
,
The Last Meal
.
Snoop
's increasingly old-school pose suits his gracefully aging self well. Despite his former affiliation with
Death Row Records
and his much-publicized murder trial,
never seemed like much of a thug, which is partly why hostile albums like
Tha Doggfather
(1996) and
Da Game Is to Be Sold Not to Be Told
(1998) seemed a bit forced. Contrarily, it seems more natural for him to
rap
about the pampered pimp life, as he does here on
-- tall glasses of Hennesey, glistening pairs of Stacey Adams, overcast clouds of chronic smoke, hungry hordes of so-called bitches -- over truck-rattling
G-funk
basslines that lope along at a languid tempo. These impressive beats come courtesy of a similarly impressive roster of producers: second-wave G-funksters
Meech Wells
Battlecat
Jelly Roll
, and
Soopafly
, and brand-name hitmakers
Dr. Dre
Scott Storch
Timbaland
. Among this roster,
certainly stands out, as do his contributions,
"Snoop Dogg (What's My Name, Pt. 2)"
and
"Set It Off,"
which place
in an uncharacteristically energetic context. He handles himself well on these bouncy songs regardless, yet seems more at home on
Dre
's smoother contributions,
"Hennesey n Buddah"
"Lay Low."
Beyond these four tracks, the remaining 15 are a mixed bag, most of them Crip-walking along at a stoned tempo, featuring soulful
P-Funk
hooks by
Kokane
and offering laid-back respite while this lengthy album moves leisurely toward its throwback album-capper,
"Y'all Gone Miss Me."
Following this misty-eyed finale, you're left with the thankful sense that
has finally taken control of his career after succumbing to the oppressive fancy of
Suge Knight
Master P
ever since parting ways with
following
Doggystyle
(1993). ~ Jason Birchmeier
leaves much of his gang-banging past behind him in favor of preened pimp posturing on his final album for
No Limit Records
,
The Last Meal
.
Snoop
's increasingly old-school pose suits his gracefully aging self well. Despite his former affiliation with
Death Row Records
and his much-publicized murder trial,
never seemed like much of a thug, which is partly why hostile albums like
Tha Doggfather
(1996) and
Da Game Is to Be Sold Not to Be Told
(1998) seemed a bit forced. Contrarily, it seems more natural for him to
rap
about the pampered pimp life, as he does here on
-- tall glasses of Hennesey, glistening pairs of Stacey Adams, overcast clouds of chronic smoke, hungry hordes of so-called bitches -- over truck-rattling
G-funk
basslines that lope along at a languid tempo. These impressive beats come courtesy of a similarly impressive roster of producers: second-wave G-funksters
Meech Wells
Battlecat
Jelly Roll
, and
Soopafly
, and brand-name hitmakers
Dr. Dre
Scott Storch
Timbaland
. Among this roster,
certainly stands out, as do his contributions,
"Snoop Dogg (What's My Name, Pt. 2)"
and
"Set It Off,"
which place
in an uncharacteristically energetic context. He handles himself well on these bouncy songs regardless, yet seems more at home on
Dre
's smoother contributions,
"Hennesey n Buddah"
"Lay Low."
Beyond these four tracks, the remaining 15 are a mixed bag, most of them Crip-walking along at a stoned tempo, featuring soulful
P-Funk
hooks by
Kokane
and offering laid-back respite while this lengthy album moves leisurely toward its throwback album-capper,
"Y'all Gone Miss Me."
Following this misty-eyed finale, you're left with the thankful sense that
has finally taken control of his career after succumbing to the oppressive fancy of
Suge Knight
Master P
ever since parting ways with
following
Doggystyle
(1993). ~ Jason Birchmeier