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Will Rap for Food is the debut album by southern hip hop group CunninLynguists, at the time only consisting of Deacon the Villain and Kno. It was released October 2001 on Urban Acres Entertainment. The album is mostly produced by Kno, with contributions from Celph Titled and Deacon the Villain, respectively, on the singles "So Live!"
The group's debut studio album, Will Rap for Food, was released in October 2001, and was described by Pitchfork Media as "a solid, accessible debut, filled with clever rhymes and tremendously consistent production".
In other scenes, Sleazy sustains gunfire, becomes homeless, is chased by armed men, and finally, along the Pasadena Freeway, holds up a cardboard sign scribbled WILL RAP FOR FOOD. The "Dre Day" video also parodies Luke Campbell of Miami rap group 2 Live Crew, portraying him jumping around on a stage.
In 1991, Dr. Dre left N.W.A and, with Suge Knight, launched Death Row Records.It released Dre's The Chronic, which in 1993 broke gangsta rap onto pop radio.On the album, Dre and guest rapper Snoop Dogg, a star on the rise at the time, diss Eazy-E in skits, in the single "Fuck wit Dre Day" plus its music video, and, closing the album, in the hidden track "Bitches Ain't Shit."
Between 2004 and 2006, he released a series of hip hop instrumentals, named Excrementals. [ citation needed ] In 2010, Kno released his debut solo album Death Is Silent , which was critically acclaimed, with URB Magazine giving the album 4.5/5, saying "Easily one of the top five most satisfying hip-hop albums of the year and possibly one of the ...
The album focuses on a mix of rap and rock music, a style which Mosley has been considered to have made popular with the release of Faith No More's We Care a Lot; [1] a reworked version of that album's title track is featured on Will Rap Over Hard Rock for Food. [4] The song "Sophie", a ballad, is named for Mosley's youngest daughter. [2]
Chuck Mosley, born Charles Henry Mosley III (December 26, 1959 – November 9, 2017), was an American musician, singer and songwriter.During his career, he recorded over 100 songs, both as a solo artist and as a member of Faith No More, Cement, and Primitive Race.
The following list is a discography of production by No I.D., an American hip hop record producer from Chicago, Illinois. It includes a list of songs produced, co-produced and remixed by year, artist, album and title.