The Recipe
Download links and information about The Recipe by Mack 10. This album was released in 1998 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 01:01:32 minutes.
Artist: | Mack 10 |
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Release date: | 1998 |
Genre: | Hip Hop/R&B, Rap |
Tracks: | 18 |
Duration: | 01:01:32 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | Intro | 1:02 |
2. | The Recipe | 4:59 |
3. | You Ain't Seen Nothin | 3:57 |
4. | Made ****** | 3:18 |
5. | Get Yo Ride On | 3:37 |
6. | Money's Just a Touch Away | 4:33 |
7. | Suck Down (Insert) | 0:28 |
8. | Get a Lil **** | 4:28 |
9. | For the Money | 4:33 |
10. | Ghetto Horror Show | 4:45 |
11. | Lbc & the Ing | 4:36 |
12. | Radio Insert: Funk Master Flex | 0:17 |
13. | Let the Games Begin | 3:36 |
14. | #1 Crew In the Area | 5:07 |
15. | Gangsta ****'* | 3:56 |
16. | The Letter | 3:49 |
17. | Should I Stay Or Should I Go | 4:09 |
18. | Outro | 0:22 |
Details
[Edit]It became commonplace during the mid- to late '90s for rappers to litter their albums with a small nation's worth of guest stars, both for commercial purposes and for all-important sonic variety. At its worst, this tactic can lead to albums where the ostensible star ends up sounding like a guest at their own party. But at its best, the more-the-merrier formula can result in stellar albums like Mack 10's The Recipe, an unambitious but enormously satisfying slice of pop-savvy late-'90s gangsta rap that features a slew of the hottest names in hip-hop, from Eazy E to Master P to ODB and many, many more. Mack 10 got his big break from mentor/gangsta rap pioneer Ice Cube, who not surprisingly lends his gruff presence to two of the album's standout tracks: "Should I Stay or Should I Go," a borderline sacrilegious but effective reworking of the Clash classic, and "Ghetto Horror Show," a similarly cheesy but enjoyable slice of gangsta rap gothic featuring a scene-stealing turn by the underrated Jayo Felony. Snoop Dogg trades verses with the laconic but authoritative Mack 10 on another of the album's highlights, "LBC and the ING," driven by a familiar but undeniably infectious sample of "Heartbeat," one of the greatest and most-used loops in the history of hip-hop. "Money's Just a Touch Away," the album's Gerald Levert-assisted first single, is a too-slick attempt at radio-friendly crossover success, but Mack 10's sole solo showcase, "The Letter," is a surprisingly eloquent and well-reasoned defense of gangsta rap. The Recipe probably won't convert many non-believers, but for fans of straightforward, late-'90s gangsta rap, it's about as good as it gets.