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The song and video were parodied in director Rusty Cundieff's film, Fear of a Black Hat (1993). [citation needed] In the UK in 2014, the song was used on an advert for MoneySupermarket, which featured Snoop Dogg. [2] It was ranked number 456 on NME ' s "500 Greatest Songs of All Time". [3]
Christopher John Farley of Time mentioned the song as among the tracks from Doggystyle that are "perfectly crafted to come booming out of Jeeps and college dorms". [7] Alan Jones of Music Week regarded the song as "superb" and wrote "Inevitably, its lyrics are wholly unsuitable for radio. It is bound to excite extreme reactions, with enough of ...
Doggystyle is the debut studio album by American rapper Snoop Doggy Dogg.It was released on November 23, 1993, by Death Row and Interscope Records.The album was recorded and produced following Snoop Doggy Dogg's appearances on Dr. Dre's debut solo album The Chronic (1992), to which Snoop contributed significantly.
"Gin and Juice" is a song by American rapper Snoop Dogg. It was released on January 18, 1994, as the second single from his debut album, Doggystyle (1993). The song was produced by Dr. Dre and contains an interpolation from Slave's "Watching You" in its chorus and a sample from "I Get Lifted" by George McCrae.
“Doggystyle” sold over 800,000 units in its first week, making it the biggest-selling debut album and fastest-selling hip-hop album ever at the time (Eminem and 50 Cent, two Snoop Dogg ...
"Sensual Seduction", also known as "Sexual Eruption", is a song by American rapper Snoop Dogg. It was released on November 20, 2007 as the first single of his ninth studio album Ego Trippin', with the record label Geffen Records. The song was produced by Shawty Redd. Snoop Dogg sings the majority of the song using Auto-Tune. [4]
Snoop and some of his crew can be seen wearing a "Western Conference" pullover. The Western Conference is a real conference organized by Snoop and held on July 4, 2005. It was an attempt to reunite the former "West Coast" to put the westside into the mainstream by simultaneously launching a movement that helps newcomers and off-label street ...
It was also Snoop's first single outside Death Row as being a single from an album released by Columbia/Sony and produced by JD. It was also his only non-Death Row track to be released under his alternative stage name (after this, he would drop the "Doggy" in his name). Singer Trey Lorenz is featured on the chorus of the song.