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| Artist : Eazy E |
| Album : Featuring Eazy E-(Advance) |
| Bitrate : VBR kbps |
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+-------------------------------[Release Info]-------------------------------+
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| Label : Priority Records |
| Year : 2007 |
| Genre : Rap |
| Rip date : Nov-28-2007 |
| Store date : Dec-04-2007 |
| Size : 97,7 MB |
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+--------------------------------[Track List]--------------------------------+
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|Track Listing: |
| |
| 01 - Luv 4 Dem Gangsta'z 04:35 |
| 02 - 2 Hard Muthas feat. MC Ren 04:25 |
| 03 - Trust No Bitch feat. Clipse, DJ Quick 05:03 |
| and AMG |
| 04 - L.A. Is The Place feat. Ron De Vu 04:34 |
| 05 - Findum, Fuckem And Flee feat. N.W.A. 03:56 |
| 06 - Get Yo Ride On feat. Mack 10 and MC Eiht 03:31 |
| 07 - Black Nigga Killa 04:48 |
| 08 - We Want Eazy (12" Remix) 06:39 |
| 09 - Foe The Love Of Money feat. Bone 04:11 |
| Thugs-N-Harmony |
| 10 - I'd Rather Fuck You feat. N.W.A 03:58 |
| 11 - 24 Hrs To Live 04:44 |
| 12 - Boyz In The Hood feat. Dr. Dre (G Mix) 05:40 |
| 13 - Fat Girl feat. Ron De Vu 02:50 |
| 14 - Automobile feat. N.W.A. 03:17 |
| 15 - P.S. Phuk U 2 feat. Clipse and DJ Quick 03:25 |
| 16 - Ruthless Villian feat. MC Ren 02:58 |
| |
| ÄÄÄÄÄ |
| 68:34 min |
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+-------------------------------[Release Notes]------------------------------+
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| Whether as a member of N.W.A., a solo act, or a label head, Eazy-E was |
| one of the most controversial figures in gangsta rap. While his |
| technical skills as a rapper were never the greatest, his distinctive |
| delivery (invariably described as a high-pitched whine), over-the-top |
| lyrics, and undeniable charisma made him a star. Following N.W.A.'s |
| breakup, E's street credibility took a major beating, though his |
| recordings continued to sell well when they appeared; unfortunately, he |
| was diagnosed with AIDS in 1995, and died not long after. |
| |
| Eric "Eazy-E" Wright was born September 7, 1964, in Compton, CA, a rough |
| part of the Los Angeles metro area that N.W.A. would later make |
| notorious. A high school dropout, Wright turned to drug dealing to |
| support himself, and eventually used the profits to start his own rap |
| label, Ruthless Records, with partner and music-business veteran Jerry |
| Heller. E discovered a major performing talent in the D.O.C., and |
| recruited Ice Cube and Dr. Dre to write songs for his stable of artists. |
| When their composition "Boyz-N-the Hood" was rejected by Ruthless signee |
| HBO, Cube, Dre, and E formed the first version of N.W.A. to record it |
| themselves. Their first album, N.W.A. and the Posse, was released in |
| 1987 and largely ignored; after a few tweaks of the lineup and the |
| rough-edged subject matter, 1988's Straight Outta Compton made N.W.A. |
| into superstars. E seized the opportunity to release a solo project |
| later in the year, titled Eazy-Duz-It, which would be the only full- |
| length album he would complete; it would sell well over two-million |
| copies. |
| |
| After Ice Cube's bitter departure from N.W.A. toward the end of 1989 |
| (precipitated in part by Heller's business tactics), Eazy-E took over |
| his not inconsiderable share of the rapping and songwriting duties, |
| becoming the group's dominant voice on 1991's Efil4zaggin. His taste for |
| cartoon-ish vulgarity began to undermine the claims of realistic inner- |
| city reporting that the group had used to defend themselves. Disputes |
| between the members led to N.W.A.'s breakup that summer, and a court |
| battle between Ruthless and Dre's new label Death Row soon followed, |
| with Eazy alleging that Death Row head Suge Knight had coerced Ruthless |
| into releasing Dre from his contract. The case was eventually thrown |
| out, but a bitter feud between Dre and Eazy raged for the next several |
| years; Dre's seminal solo debut The Chronic made merciless fun of Eazy. |
| E's 1992 solo EP 5150 Home 4 tha Sick sold well, but did little to |
| dispel his increasingly cartoon-ish image; he found more success running |
| the Ruthless label, with a roster that included Above the Law, N.W.A. |
| bandmate MC Ren, the poorly received all-female group H.W.A. (Hoez With |
| Attitude), and, eventually, the lucrative Bone Thugs-N-Harmony. Eazy |
| addressed his feud with Dre on the 1993 EP It's On (Dr. Dre) 187um |
| Killa, which famously included an actual photo of Dre wearing makeup and |
| sequins during his World Class Wreckin' Cru days. Still, save for |
| dissing Dre, Eazy didn't seem to have much to say, and despite healthy |
| record sales, his artistic credibility was declining at an alarming |
| rate. Eazy didn't help matters much when, in early 1993, he spoke out in |
| support of Theodore Briseno, the only LAPD officer involved in the |
| Rodney King beating to express displeasure; later in the year, he paid |
| 2,500 dollars to attend a Republican fund-raiser, which his detractors |
| saw as a further betrayal of his roots. |
| |
| In early 1995, Eazy entered the hospital with respiratory difficulties, |
| believing he had developed asthma. The diagnosis was far more serious: |
| he had contracted AIDS. Eazy announced his plight to the public shortly |
| thereafter, winning admiration for his straightforward attitude. Sadly, |
| just a few weeks later, on March 26, 1995, the disease claimed his life. |
| The record he had been working on, Str8 Off tha Streetz of Muthaphukkin |
| Compton, was released posthumously (in unfinished form) later on in the |
| year. In 2002, on the seventh anniversary of his death, some previously |
| unreleased material from the Ruthless vaults was released as the EP |
| Impact of a Legend, which was accompanied by a DVD. |
| |
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