Self destruction Vs. we're all in the same game
Gary
3,982 Posts
Which is better and who had the best verse in each one?
I lean towards self destruction probably because nostgia.
Best verses: mc lyte / digital underground
Bonus beats: anybody remember "close the crack house"? There was also a similar stop the violence type mega posse cut with cypress hill. I have a copy of it somewhere. It wasn't very good. I don't even remember the name....
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Stop the violence was all peace and love but no juice crew...
"We all in the same gang"... Except ice cube because fuck that sellout right?
I lean towards self destruction probably because nostgia.
Best verses: mc lyte / digital underground
Bonus beats: anybody remember "close the crack house"? There was also a similar stop the violence type mega posse cut with cypress hill. I have a copy of it somewhere. It wasn't very good. I don't even remember the name....
-----
Stop the violence was all peace and love but no juice crew...
"We all in the same gang"... Except ice cube because fuck that sellout right?
Comments
"I lean towards self destruction probably because nostgia."
this! for all the same reasons, that beat switch up on the D.U verse is dope..
Yeah that is the best part of the song for sure. But I gotta take away points for Michelle talking in her mouse voice. I'll also subtract one point for MC Hammer, but I'm going to add that point back because there is something surreal about having MC Hammer and Eazy E in the same song, back to back... and in the video he does a couple of his Hammer moves right as Eazy's verse starts.
I wonder why Too Short didn't make it on there. Seems like an odd omission.
I've been googling trying to find the name of this Cypress Hill 'stop the violence' style posse cut and nothing is turning up. I swear it exists. If I didn't have all my records boxed away in the garage I would go look for it.
+1
LL Cool J wrote Lyte's verse.
Self-Destruction for the win.
Guilty pleasure - Hammer's enthusiasm/verse.
I'm guessing you mean "Get the Fist"
Anyway, "Self Destruction" > "We're All in the Same Gang" It's all about MC Lyte's verse, plus one super-powerful couplet from Kool Moe Dee:
"I never ever ran from the Ku Klux Klan
And I shouldn't have to run from a Black man"
"Close the Crackhouse" was good and bad. Brother J killed it, of course, Digital Underground was great, and I dug hearing Wise Intelligent do that sing-songy style over the Meters drums. But seriously, why the fuck was Freedom Williams on there?
They put LL Cool J on a track with a bunch of Conscious Sisters so he keeps it LL with this extended metaphor or simile or allegory or whatever:
"One of the biggest lies you hear from no one else
Is when a girl tries to say she don't do it to herself
Always fantasizing but steadily denying
Last night she had to stop 'cause her baby was crying
She do it on the phone all alone wit a smile
Run the water, grab the shower cap and get buckwhyled
Soap suds on the floor, oh Al B Sure
Give it to me, give it to me, give me a little more
I'm fiending, creaming, screaming, dreaming (what else)
The girl's possessed by the basehead demon."
b/w:
Weusi Shule > the wack teachers and the wick-wack system
Dude! You trying to get your MacArthur pass revoked or something?
Same Gang definitely is the stronger track over Self Destruction. The beat for Self Destruction is mediocre and the chanting is not so hot. Same Gang's primary beat was tepid, and then they teased you with a bunch of beats interspersed that were all much better. Digital Underground part? 15 seconds of good beat. Above the Law part? 15 seconds of good beat. Intro? 15 seconds of good beat. Rest of the song? Not so much.
Digital Underground was hot back then, but doesn't it seem weird to have a guy in a plastic nose trying to be serious about gang violence? I guess that's not much different than Hammer being on the track, of course Hammer had serious songs on his albums that no one ever listened to because everyone just bought the U Can't Touch This cassingle and called it a day.
Then again Dana Dane had a song that got airplay that was all about kids getting molested, The 1990s were an interesting time in hip hop.
Gary's baby never hurt nobody, but he still got smoked at BeBe's party,
Harvey's not the first
or the last
Nothing but a short story
from the past
He's dead now
Not a number one
but a zero
Take notes from Grafwrit-ee
Your violent hero