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The Genius of Rudy Ray Moore Aka Dolemite

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Download links and information about The Genius of Rudy Ray Moore Aka Dolemite by Rudy Ray Moore. This album was released in 2006 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Soul, Theatre/Soundtrack, Humor genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 50:28 minutes.

Artist: Rudy Ray Moore
Release date: 2006
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Rap, Soul, Theatre/Soundtrack, Humor
Tracks: 11
Duration: 50:28
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on iTunes $6.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Prelude 1:45
2. Feeling Good 5:47
3. Don't Go No Further 3:42
4. Grand Diva 5:58
5. You Got What It Takes 3:32
6. I Can't Stop Lovin' You 7:22
7. Bootey Green 5:40
8. Need to Belong 3:37
9. It Hurts Me to My Heart 2:42
10. Let's Do It Again 4:27
11. Only Here for a Little While 5:56

Details

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In a 2006 interview with AllHipHop.com's Martin A. Berrios, veteran comedian Rudy Ray Moore (who had reached 79) pointed out that he was doing X-rated comedy when Richard Pryor was still doing clean comedy. Indeed, Moore took blue humor to another level, bombarding audiences with profanity and rhyming about pimps, players, hustlers, ballers, tricks, and hoes — in other words, all of the things that Too Short, Ice-T, and Snoop Dogg subsequently earned a very good living rapping about. Assembled in 2006, The Best of Rudy Ray Moore & Friends looks back on Moore's groundbreaking '70s work and is full of raunchy, sexually explicit material that helped pave the way for so many of the hardcore rappers who emerged in the '80s, '90s, and 2000s. The tracks on this 55-minute CD can be divided into two categories: (1) essential Moore favorites like "Signifyin' Monkey," "Petey Wheatstraw," "Dolemite," and "Shine & the Great Titanic"; and (2) lesser-known but enjoyable recordings by Moore-influenced comedians Billie McAllister (a female impersonator), Nancy Reed (aka Lady Reed), and Jerry Walker. Anyone with even a basic knowledge of Moore's legacy will be familiar with "Dolemite" and "Signifyin' Monkey," but only the truly hardcore and most knowledgeable Moore fans will be familiar with the rare McAllister, Reed, and Walker material — which makes The Best of Rudy Ray Moore & Friends especially important for collectors. As a best-of, this disc falls short of ideal; "Mr. Big Dick" and "Hurricane Annie" are among the essential classics that are missing. But The Best of Rudy Ray Moore & Friends still has a lot going for it, and serious collectors will be delighted to see the McAllister, Reed, and Walker rarities now available on CD.