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Mobb Deep initially recorded 20 songs for The Infamous, but executive producers Matt Life and Schott Free worked with them to improve the music. [5] Matt Life recalled, "Schott worked closely with them on how the rhymes were coming and I worked closely with them on how production was coming.
No Blood Money songs are on the album since those tracks are owned by Universal Music Group, not Sony Music Entertainment, the label that released this album. The disc includes "Blood Money" and "Go Head," two previously unreleased tracks. "Keep It Thoro" is the only song featured on a non-Mobb Deep album (Prodigy's H.N.I.C.).
On April 4, 2011, Mobb Deep released a new single called "Dog Shit," featuring rapper Nas. This was the first official song by Mobb Deep since Prodigy's release from jail. It was produced by Havoc and The Alchemist. On July 27, 2012, Havoc told AllHipHop in an interview that the group was on an indefinite hiatus.
The original "Shook Ones" was released as a promotional single in 1994 as the debut single on Mobb Deep's new label, Loud Records.Producer Havoc stated, . What made us do a remix or a part two to the first “Shook Ones” was just our nervousness about failing because we had came off of the Juvenile Hell album, which wasn’t too successful.
(Almighty R.S.O. featuring Mobb Deep) 1996 "LA LA" (Capone-N-Noreaga featuring Mobb Deep and Tragedy Khadafi) Unknown "The Roof (Back in Time) [Extended Mobb Deep Remix] (Mariah Carey featuring Mobb Deep) 1998 Diane Martel "No Exit" (Loud Allstars Remix) (Blondie featuring Mobb Deep, U-God and Inspectah Deck) 1999 Unknown "Da Bridge 2001"
"Survival of the Fittest" is a song by American hip hop duo Mobb Deep from their second studio album, The Infamous (1995). It was released as the second single from the aforementioned album on May 29, 1995, by Loud Records. The song was produced by Havoc, using a sample of the 1976 song "Skylark" by The Barry Harris Trio and Al Cohn.
Because L made the song talking about pink cookies in a plastic bag, it was kind of weird. We was like, "Fuck that. We're going to make it some hardcore shit." So that's how we flipped that shit. [1] The song paints a grim picture of the Queensbridge Housing Project, with topics of street robbery, shootouts, drug and alcohol use and drug dealing.
The song was written in the form of a letter to an associate that is hiding from the police, who went by the name Killa Black, who was also the older brother of Havoc. [1] Killa Black, according to Prodigy in his 2011 autobiography My Infamous Life: The Autobiography of Mobb Deep's Prodigy , murdered a man over Walkman speakers, and Havoc hid ...