WE DO THE MASHED POTATO AND THE FUNKY CHICKEN

Dr. Dre

2001

  • AMG Review of 2001

    Amg
    Stephen Thomas Erlewine
    All Music Guide

    The Slim Shady LP announced not only Eminem's arrival, but it established that his producer Dr. Dre was anything but passé, thereby raising expectations for 2001, the long-anticipated sequel to The Chronic. It suggested that 2001 wouldn't simply be recycled Chronic, and, musically speaking, that's more or less true. He's pushed himself hard, finding new variations in the formula by adding ominous strings, soulful vocals, and reggae, resulting in fairly interesting recontextualizations. Padded out to 22 tracks, 2001 isn't as consistent or striking as Slim Shady, but the music is always brimming with character. If only the same could be said about the rappers! Why does a producer as original as Dre work with such pedestrian rappers? Perhaps it's to ensure his control over the project, or to mask his own shortcomings as an MC, but the album suffers considerably as a result. Out of all the other rappers on 2001, only Snoop and Eminem -- Dre's two great protégés -- have character and while Eminem's jokiness still is unpredictable, Snoop sounds nearly as tired as the second-rate rappers. The only difference is, there's pleasure in hearing Snoop's style, while the rest sound staid. That's the major problem with 2001: lyrically and thematically, it's nothing but gangsta clichés. Scratch that, it's über-gangsta, blown up so large that it feels like a parody. Song after song, there's a never-ending litany of violence, drugs, pussy, bitches, dope, guns, and gangsters. After a full decade of this, it takes real effort to get outraged at this stuff, so chances are, you'll shut out the words and groove along since, sonically, this is first-rate, straight-up gangsta. Still, no matter how much fun you may have, it's hard not to shake the feeling that this is cheap, not lasting, fun.

10th Anniversary Of Dr. Dre's "Chronic 2001" Album
8 days ago

November 16th marked the 10 year anniversary of the release of Dr. Dre's "Chronic 2001" album. Over the last decade the LP has reached classic status amongst hip hop fans, and of course fueled the anticipation for the follow up album "Detox", that has yet to surface. Let's take a look back on Dre's sophomore opus....The SetupAfter Dr. Dre chose to leave the dominant Death Row Records to creat...

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Excitement in 12 Seconds Flat
about 1 year ago

Only Dre could get my hopes up in a single stilted sentence...well maybe if I heard the same words from Mos Def.That's another story altogether. At 22 seconds, Dre tells one of the public's most annoying pests that Detox will be out +this+ fall.I **REALLY** wanna believe him...keep ya fingers crossed.

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Hip-Hop Thursday: Sans Rappers #2
over 2 years ago

The first hip-hop instrumental album I bought (if you don't count stuff like DJ Shadow's Endtroducing...) was the instrumental version of Dr. Dre's 2001 (aka Chronic 2001) album. 2001 is the only album that I own in multiple versions.That album is full of great beats from the creepy piano and strings of "The Watcher" to "Xxplosive," a beat so good that Erykah Badu had to jack it for "Bag Lady....

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Top 2001 Listeners

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