Download Unlimited Ringtones for iPhone and Android Here. Get the latest ringtones of Jimmy Page, Kerli, K2Wralnj, My Girl, T487U9J1, Ncis New Orleans, Aerosmith. Lyrics Boyz-n-the-Hood. Woke up quick at about noon. Just thought that I had to be in Compton soon. I gotta get drunk before the day begins. Before my mother starts bitchin' about my friends. About to go and damn near went blind. Young nigga's on the path throwing up gang signs. I went in the house to get the clip. Laughs 'A'yo, man, you remember that shit Eazy did a while back? Motherfuckers said wasn't gonna work (that crazy shit). Stupid shit man, aiyo Eazy. Why don't you come out from the piano. And bust this crazy shit.' Woke up quick, at about noon.
- Boyz N The Hood Dynamite Hack Free Mp3 Download Mp3
- Boyz N The Hood Dynamite Hack Free Mp3 Download Music
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
'Boyz-n-the-Hood' | |||
---|---|---|---|
Single by Eazy-E | |||
from the album N.W.A. and the Posse | |||
B-side | Dopeman (By N.W.A) | ||
Released | 1987 | ||
Format | CD single | ||
Recorded | 1986 | ||
Genre | West Coast hip hop, Gangsta rap | ||
Length | 6:24 | ||
Label | Ruthless Records | ||
Writer(s) | Ice Cube | ||
Producer | Dr. Dre | ||
Eazy-E singles chronology | |||
|
Boyz-n-the-Hood is the solo debut by rapper Eazy-E as a part of N.W.A.Ice Cube wrote the song, and originally intended it to be for H.B.O., another group signed by Ruthless, but after they rejected it Eazy was convinced to rap it. The song was originally on N.W.A. and the Posse, which started with the phrase: 'Cruisin' down the street in my '64'. Ruthless Records executive Jerry Heller considers the song to be a mix of Gil Scott-Heron, The Last Poets, the Rolling Stones, and the Black Panthers.[1] This samples 'I'm a Ho' by Whodini and vocal samples from 'Hold it now, Hit it' by The Beastie Boys.It was remixed and featured on Eazy's debut albumEazy-Duz-It, which was released in 1988. It was remixed again and was featured on Eazy-E's third album, It's On (Dr. Dre) 187um Killa (1993) under the name 'Boyz-n-the-Hood (G mix)'.
Other Versions
In 2004, the song was re imagined and sampled by rapper Jim Jones on his debut album On My Way to Church. His version was called 'Certified Gangstas', and featured The Game and Cam'ron (the album version did not feature the Game, however).
Besides Jim Jones' song there have been many remakes, most notably a cover by alternative rock band Dynamite Hack, which hit #12 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks in 2000.
Hispanic rap group Brownside did a remake to the song called 'Vatos In The Barrio'. The instrumental of the original is remade, and the lyrics are slightly different but keep the main structure of the Eazy-E version.
Underground memphis rapper Koopsta Knicca made his own version called Back In Da Hood with also underground rapper Booker Headlock
In 2006, Lil' Scrappy interpreted a line for his song 'Gangsta Gangsta'.
The chorus and main notes were used consistently by Red Hot Chili Peppers when they played 'Party On Your Pussy' during the Mother's Milk tour of 1989-1990.
It is sampled in 'Front Back' by UGK[2] (as well as its remix by T.I.[3]) and 'My 64' by Mike Jones (featuring Bun B, Snoop Dogg and Lil' Eazy-E.[4]
The last line of the Dynamite Hack version of the song, 'Punkass trippin' in the dead of night... homie scored a key, he's gonna fly, punkass fly...' is sung to the tune of the opening line of Beatles song 'Blackbird'- 'Blackbird singing in the dead of night, take these broken wings and learn to fly.'
'Hold It Now, Hit It' by the Beastie Boys was apparently sampledmuch in making Boyz-n-the-Hood and a possible sample of the MARRS song 'Pump Up The Volume' when a voice says 'Pump That Beat'.
'Them Boys Down South' by Big Chance. Track 8 (Disc 2) on DJ Screw's album 'The Legend' has the same song style as Boyz-n-the-Hood.
References
- ^Breakdown FM: Still Ruthless-Interview w/ Jerry Heller pt1 on Odeo
- ^UGK Front, Back Side & Side - Song - MP3 Stream on IMEEM Music
- ^T.I. FRONT BACK - Song - MP3 Stream on IMEEM Music
- ^Mike Jones My '64 - Song - MP3 Stream on IMEEM Music
|
Superfast | |||
---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | |||
Released | May 23, 2000 | ||
Recorded | 1999-2000, The Fire Station | ||
Genre | Alternative rock, punk rock | ||
Length | 43:20 | ||
Label | Woppitzer/Farmclub.com/Universal Records | ||
Producer | David Eaton | ||
Dynamite Hack chronology | |||
|
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
Los Angeles Times | [2] |
PopMatters | 7.8/10[3] |
The Tampa Tribune | [4] |
Windsor Star | [5] |
Superfast is a studio album by the rock band Dynamite Hack, released in 2000.[6][7]
The album peaked at No. 84 on the Billboard 200.[8]
Production[edit]
The album was produced by David Eaton. A remixed version of the 'Boyz-N-The-Hood' cover appears on the album, after Dr. Dre asked the band to remove certain words.[9]
Critical reception[edit]
The Austin Chronicle called the album 'supersheeny corporate punk.'[10] The Los Angeles Times wrote: 'Call ‘em Blink-91—a cut-rate, half-price take on Blink-182’s melodic power-punk, minus the puerile wit and deceptively smart commentary (in other words, the character).'[2]Texas Monthly deemed the album 'the smartest power pop to break out of Texas in years.'[11]Style Weekly wrote that 'bubble-gum punk, pseudo-rap, and watered-down 'alternative' rock are all present.'[12]The Morning Call considered it 'slightly above-average pop-punk that plays with dynamics more than usual, though not enough to transcend the overdone and tired genre.'[13]
The Village Voice chose the band's cover of 'Boyz-N-The-Hood' as the 46th worst song of the 2000s.[14]
Track listing[edit]
All songs written by Dynamite Hack, except where noted.
- 1. 'Switcheroo' 3:12
- 2. 'Anyway' 2:33
- 3. 'Alvin' 2:41
- 4. 'Dear Kate,' 2:51
- 5. 'G-Force' 3:00
- 6. 'Wussypuff' 3:02
- 7. 'Blue Sky' 3:46
- 8. 'Slice Of Heaven' 2:42
- 9. 'Granola' 2:04
- 10. 'Boyz-N-The-Hood' 3:04 (Lyrics: Andre Young, Eric Wright, O'Shea Jackson; Music: Dynamite Hack)
- 11. 'Pick Up Lines' 3:12
- 12. 'Marie...' 2:44
- 13. 'Just Another Day, Baby' 0:25
- 14. 'Laughter' 2:16
- 15. 'Anyway (Mellow Version)' 4:00
'Boyz-N-The-Hood' is a cover, originally performed by N.W.A..
Personnel[edit]
Dynamite Hack[edit]
- Mark Morris - Guitar, Piano, Vocals
- Mike Vlahakis: Guitars
- Chad Robinson: Bass, Vocals
- Chase Texas: Drums, Percussion
Additional Personnel[edit]
- Willy Paisano: Keyboards on 'Blue Sky'
- William Snell: Slide Guitar on 'Marie...'
- Emily Kate: Additional Vocal on 'Anyway (Piano Version)'
- Christophe 'Robitussin': Drums on 'Blue Sky' and 'Slice of Heaven'
- Jon Dishongh: Additional keyboards and electronic beats/sequencing
Production[edit]
- Arranged by Dynamite Hack and David Eaton
- Produced and recorded by David Eaton, with recording assistance (at Fire Station) by Bobby Arnold
- Tracks 1-9 and 11-15 mixed at Quad Studios and Pedernales Studios by Chris Shaw (assistance at Quad Studios by Gabriel Martinez); track 10 mixed by David Eaton
- Mastered by Howie Weinberg
- All songs published by Choosy Mothers Music/Pie Mikey Pie Music/Wussypuff Music/Happysmallchild Music, except track ten (lyrics published by Ruthless Attack Music; music published by Choosy Mothers Music/Pie Mikey Pie Music/Wussypuff Music/Happysmallchild Music)
Singles[edit]
Boyz N The Hood Dynamite Hack Free Mp3 Download Mp3
- 'Boyz-N-The Hood', released in March/April 2000 as the first single.
Boyz N The Hood Dynamite Hack Free Mp3 Download Music
References[edit]
- ^'Superfast - Dynamite Hack | Songs, Reviews, Credits | AllMusic' – via www.allmusic.com.
- ^ ab'** Dynamite Hack, 'Superfast,' Farmclub/Universal'. Los Angeles Times. May 20, 2000.
- ^'Dynamite Hack: Superfast'. PopMatters. Retrieved 17 June 2021.
- ^Ross, Curtis (February 23, 2001). 'Spin this'. The Tampa Tribune. FRIDAY EXTRA!. p. 17.
- ^'CD Reviews'. Windsor Star. 25 May 2000. p. E6.
- ^'Dynamite Hack | Biography & History'. AllMusic.
- ^'Dynamite Hack Detonates 'Boyz-N-The Hood' Cover'. MTV News.
- ^'Dynamite Hack'. Billboard.
- ^Hess, Mickey (May 2005). ''Don't Quote Me, Boy': Dynamite Hack Covers NWA's 'Boyz-N-The-Hood''. Popular Music and Society. 28 (2): 179–191.
- ^'Dynamite Hack Superfast (Woppitzer/Universal)'. www.austinchronicle.com.
- ^'Superfast'. Texas Monthly. March 1, 2000.
- ^'Reviews of CDs by Used Carlotta, Jars of Clay, Dynamite Hack and Ween'. Style Weekly.
- ^Terlesky, John (26 Aug 2000). 'DYNAMITE HACK: SUPERFAST'. The Morning Call. p. A55.
- ^'The 50 Worst Songs of the '00s, F2K No. 46: Dynamite Hack, 'Boyz-N-The-Hood''. The Village Voice. November 27, 2009.