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Weapons of Mass Destruction is the fifth studio album by American rapper Xzibit. It was released on December 14, 2004, through Open Bar Entertainment , Columbia Records and Sony Urban Music . Recording sessions took place at Encore Studios in Burbank , Soundcastle Studios and Khalil's Home Studio in Los Angeles , N House Studios in Studio City ...
"Hey Now (Mean Muggin)" is the first single from American rapper Xzibit's album, Weapons of Mass Destruction. The song was produced by Timbaland and his protégé, Nate "Danja" Hills, featuring vocals by American singer and songwriter Keri Hilson.
Year Album 2010 Digital Dynasty 12 [24]. Released: March 30, 2010; alongside Tha Advocate; 2013 Serial Killers Vol. 1 (Serial Killers: Xzibit, B-Real & Demrick) . Released: October 31, 2013
"Harrowdown Hill" is a song by the English musician Thom Yorke, released on 21 August 2006 as the first single from his first solo album, The Eraser. Yorke wrote it about the death of David Kelly, a British weapons expert who told a reporter that the British government had falsely identified weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.
Weapons of Grass Destruction is the sixth full-length album by American band Hayseed Dixie, released in 2007. The album's name continues the band's practice of adding the word grass to common phrases, in this case, weapons of mass destruction .
Download QR code; Print/export ... Weapons of Mass Destruction (2004) ... Man vs. Machine is the fourth studio album by American rapper Xzibit. It was released on ...
Open Bar's first release was Xzibit's third studio album, Restless. Among others, it featured Xzibit's protege and Open Bar's newest signee, rapper Defari. The album was the best selling album for both Open Bar and Xzibit, peaking in the top 15 on the Billboard 200 and was certified platinum by the RIAA for selling a million copies in America.
Musically, he started the year off with the release of his second compilation album Appetite for Destruction featuring 50 Cent on one track, consisting mostly of tracks from his Dre period and songs that didn't make the cut for his fifth studio album Weapons of Mass Destruction, which was released in December 2004, entering the charts at 43 in ...