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Cypress Hill also provided some of the voice acting for the game. Prior to the game's release, the group's song " I Ain't Goin' Out Like That " was used for the initial trailer in 1998. The song and " How I Could Just Kill a Man " were initially going to be included in the game, but was scrapped in favor of the tracks off of the newer IV album.
Cypress Hill have been cited as an influence by artists such as Eminem, [40] Baby Bash, [41] Paul Wall, [42] Post Malone, [43] Luniz, [44] and Fat Joe. [45] Cypress Hill have also been cited as a strong influence on nu metal bands such as Deftones, [46] Limp Bizkit, [47] System of a Down, [48] Linkin Park, [49] Rage Against the Machine [50] and ...
Elephants on Acid is the ninth studio album by American hip hop group Cypress Hill, and is the group's first studio album in eight years following Rise Up making it the group's longest gap between albums. [8]
Cypress Hill has reigned as one of the west coast’s greatest rap groups since forming in L.A. in the late ‘80s. With B-Real’s distinctive nasal tone, Sen Dog’s commanding bark, and ...
Cypress Hill: How I Could Just Kill A Man David Perez Shadi Hand on the Pump n/c The Phuncky Feel One 1992 Stoned is the Way of the Walk Jake Scott (director) Real Estate Latin Lingo n/c 1993 Black Sunday: Insane in the Brain Josh Taft: When The S*** Goes Down F. Gary Gray: I Ain't Goin' Out Like That 1995 Temples of Boom: Throw Your Set In The ...
Nearly 30 years Cypress Hill's appearance on The Simpsons, its fictional collaboration with the London Symphony Orchestra will become real on Wednesday.
Cypress Hill's self-titled debut album was a critical and commercial hit, selling 2 million copies, and their follow-up album, 1993's Black Sunday, was an even bigger hit, debuting at #1 on the Billboard 200 and eventually selling 3.4 million copies.
"How I Could Just Kill a Man" is the debut single by hip hop group Cypress Hill from their eponymous debut album, Cypress Hill, and was their first major hit in 1991. It was released as a double A-side to "The Phuncky Feel One". The song was also in the movie Juice (1992). It was re-released in 1999 with Spanish lyrics and a new video.