| MTV Chronic 2001 (1999)
Chronic
2001 is thick-bass-heavy like 22" inch
rims buoyed by hydraulic bounce. It's the sound of
twilight street folklore, old yarns spun by vain,
swaggering young and old Gs. And it's brilliant.
Dr.
Dre frames the album with his only two solo cuts,
"The Watcher," and the melodic, Mary J. Blige-enhanced
"The Message," affirming that he is indeed the
Alpha and the Omega. "The Watcher" ignites
without warning: "Things just ain't the same for
gangsters," Dr. Dre booms over high octane bass
tickled with high octave keys. A panoramic survey of rap
through one its sub-genre's architects, Dr. Dre reminds us
that he has been there, done that, seen that, from Eazy-E's
death to Tupac's murder, and that the new Dr. Dre, a
thirtysomething self-proclaimed family man, has
"moved out of the hood for good." However,
unlike artists who create id-satiating alter-egos (see RZA/Bobby
Digital), Dr. Dre passes the thug baton to fully
independent other egos like Hittman and Eminem with which
to race up the charts.
Shivering
with a plucky ukulele, "Still D.R.E." is the
last anthem of the millennium with equally incisive
lyrics, courtesy of ghostwriter Sean Carter. Dr. Dre and
his multi-platinum boy Eminem converse "Guilty
Conscience"-style on "What's the
Difference." A "biotch"-whispering Snoop
and a virulent Hittman drape "Bitch N****s," a
low slung, Blaxploitationist-funk-groove. "Bang
Bang" sizzles. "Forgot about Dre" cranks.
And
the jams just go on and on, way into the Dre night, to the
dawn of the Dre Day.
© 1999 MTV Networks. All Rights Reserved.
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