Ice T Presents Westside

~ Release by Various Artists (see all versions of this release, 1 available)

Tracklist

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1CD
#TitleArtistRatingLength
16 ’n the Mornin’ (explicit LP version)
producer:
The Unknown DJ
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Techno Hop Records (in 1986) and Sire Records Company (not for release label use!) (in 1987)
recording of:
6 in the Mornin’ (in 1986)
lyricist:
Ice‐T
composer:
Andre Pierre and Ice‐T
Ice‐T43:44
2Turn This Mutha Out
producer:
MC Hammer
MC Hammer4:40
3Funky Cold Medina
engineer:
Mario Caldato Jr.
producer and mixer:
Matt Dike (American producer) and Michael Ross (Hip hop producer, engineer and co-founder of Delicious Vinyl)
arranger:
Matt Dike (American producer) and Michael Ross (Hip hop producer, engineer and co-founder of Delicious Vinyl)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
The Bicycle Music Company (part of Concord Bicycle Music since 2015/04/01, overseeing publishing and rights management) (in 1989)
samples:
Hot Blooded by Foreigner (British/American rock band)
part of:
Grammy Award: Best Rap Performance nominees (number: 1990)
recording of:
Funky Cold Medina
lyricist:
Marvin Young
composer:
Matt Dike (American producer), Marvin Young and Michael Ross (Hip hop producer, engineer and co-founder of Delicious Vinyl)
Tone‐Lōc3.84:08
4‘Life Is… Too Short’ (LP version)
co-producer:
Randy Austin (co‐founder of Dangerous Music) and Ted Bohanon
producer:
Todd Shaw (Too $hort)
mixer:
Al Eaton and Todd Shaw (Too $hort)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Zomba Recording Corp. (not strictly a label - avoid adding releases here) (in 1988)
co-produced for:
Dangerous Music (Too $hort & Dangerous Crew)
recorded at:
One Little Indian Music in El Cerrito, California, United States
recording of:
Life Is… Too Short
lyricist and composer:
Todd Shaw (Too $hort)
publisher:
Willesden Music Inc. (BMI-affiliated, merged into Zomba Enterprises, Inc.)
Too $hort4.54:34
5Bust a Move
producer and mixer:
Matt Dike (American producer) and Michael Ross (Hip hop producer, engineer and co-founder of Delicious Vinyl)
guest bass guitar:
Flea (US bassist)
arranger:
Matt Dike (American producer) and Michael Ross (Hip hop producer, engineer and co-founder of Delicious Vinyl)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Delicious Vinyl, Inc. (in 1989)
mixed for, arranged for and produced for:
Delicious Vinyl Inc.
samples:
Daytime Hustler by Bette Midler, Found a Child by Ballin’ Jack and Scorpio by Dennis Coffey & The Detroit Guitar Band
part of:
Grammy Award: Best Rap Performance nominees (number: 1990 winner) and VH1: 100 Greatest Songs of the 80’s (compiled in 2006) (number: 60)
recording of:
Bust a Move
writer:
Matt Dike (American producer), Marvin Young and Michael Ross (Hip hop producer, engineer and co-founder of Delicious Vinyl)
Young MC44:24
6You Played Yourself
programming:
Afrika Islam (in 1989)
producer:
Afrika Islam (in 1989) and Ice‐T (in 1989)
mixer:
Vachik Aghaniantz (in 1989) and Mark Wolfon (in 1989)
lead vocals:
Ice‐T (in 1989)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Sire Records Company (not for release label use!) (in 1989) and WEA International (not for release label use! copyrights holder, distributor for the world outside of the US) (in 1989)
produced for:
Rhyme Syndicate Productions
recorded at:
Syndicate Studios West in Los Angeles, California, United States (in 1989) and Wide Tracks in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (in 1989)
mixed at:
Milagro Sound Recorders in Glendale, California, United States (in 1989) and Soundcastle (former LA location) in Silver Lake, Los Angeles, California, United States (in 1989)
samples:
The Boss by James Brown (The Godfather of Soul)
recording of:
You Played Yourself (in 1989)
lyricist:
Tracy Lauren Marrow (Ice‐T)
writer:
Charles Bobbitt, James Brown (The Godfather of Soul) and Fred Wesley
composer:
Charles Andre Glenn and Tracy Lauren Marrow (Ice‐T)
is based on:
The Boss
Ice‐T4:14
7Wild Thing
engineer:
Mario Caldato Jr.
producer and mixer:
Matt Dike (American producer) and Michael Ross (Hip hop producer, engineer and co-founder of Delicious Vinyl)
arranger:
Matt Dike (American producer) and Michael Ross (Hip hop producer, engineer and co-founder of Delicious Vinyl)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
The Bicycle Music Company (part of Concord Bicycle Music since 2015/04/01, overseeing publishing and rights management) (in 1989)
samples:
Jamie’s Cryin’ by Van Halen (American hard rock band)
part of:
VH1: 100 Greatest Songs of the 80’s (compiled in 2006) (number: 90)
recording of:
Wild Thing
writer:
Anthony Smith, Matt Dike (American producer), Marvin Young and Michael Ross (Hip hop producer, engineer and co-founder of Delicious Vinyl)
Tone‐Lōc3.854:24
8La Raza
producer:
Tony G (West Coast hip hop producer Antonio Gonzalez)
Kid Frost3:25
9Born & Raised in Compton
producer:
DJ Quik (West Coast US rapper & producer)
recording of:
Born and Raised in Compton
writer:
David Marvin Blake (West Coast US rapper & producer)
publisher:
Protoons Inc. and Total Trak Music
DJ Quik3:26
10Dr. Bombay (LP version)
producer:
Boogiemen (US hip-hop production trio), Del the Funky Homosapien and Ice Cube
recording of:
Dr. Bombay
composer:
Ice Cube
Del the Funkee Homosapien4:39
11How I Could Just Kill a Man
recording engineer:
Jason Roberts (engineer)
engineer:
Joe “The Butcher” Nicolo
producer:
DJ Muggs
mixer:
DJ Muggs and Joe “The Butcher” Nicolo
arranger:
DJ Muggs
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Sony BMG Music Entertainment (Aug 5, 2004 – Oct 1, 2008) (in 1991)
recorded at:
Image Recording in Los Angeles, California, United States
mixed at and engineered at:
Studio 4 Recording in Conshohocken, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
samples:
Are You Experienced? by The Jimi Hendrix Experience, Midnight Theme by Manzel (’70s US instrumental funk band), Reading the Comics - July, 1945 by Fiorello La Guardia (American politician) and Tramp by Lowell Fulson
recording of:
How I Could Just Kill a Man
lyricist:
Louis Freese and Senen Reyes
composer:
Larry Muggerud
publisher:
BMG Songs, Inc., Budget Music, Bug Music (music publishing), Careers–BMG Music Publishing, Inc., Cypress Phuncky Music (Cypress Hill publisher), Soul Assassins Music and Universal‐MCA Music Publishing (US)
Cypress Hill3.654:03
12Passing Me By
engineer:
Eric Sarafin
co-producer:
The Pharcyde
producer:
J‐Swift
mixer:
Joe Primeau and Eric Sarafin
performer:
The Pharcyde
recorded at and mixed at:
Hollywood Sound Recorders in Los Angeles, California, United States
samples:
Are You Experienced? by The Jimi Hendrix Experience and Summer in the City by Quincy Jones
recording of:
Passing Me By
writer:
Steve Boone, Derrick Stewart (US rapper, member of The Pharcyde), Emandu Wilcox (US rapper Emandu Wilcox, member of The Pharcyde), John Martinez, Romye Robinson (US rapper), John Sebastian, Mark Sebastian and Tre Hardson
is based on:
Summer in the City
The Pharcyde55:02
13Fuck With Dre Day
drums (drum set) programming:
Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer)
producer:
Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer)
additional vocals:
Jewell (US R&B singer Jewell Caples/Peyton), RBX (US rapper) and Snoop Dogg (US rapper)
vocals:
Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer)
performer:
Snoop Dogg (US rapper)
recording of:
Fuck Wit’ Dre Day (and Everybody’s Celebratin’)
lyricist:
Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer), Snoop Dogg (US rapper) and Colin Wolfe
Dr. Dre44:52
14Spice 1 Wit da Banksta
producer:
Ant Banks
performer:
Spice 1
Ant Banks featuring Spice 13:54
15Gin & Juice
producer:
Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer)
recording of:
Gin & Juice
writer:
Andre Young (Andre Young, rap producer), Calvin Broadus (aka Snoop Dogg), Harry Wayne Casey and Richard Finch
Snoop Doggy Dogg3:34
16Ice-T Interview With James Hyman, Part 1
performer:
James Hyman
Ice‐T10:15
2CD
#TitleArtistRatingLength
1Pimpology 101
producer:
Cold 187um (aka Big Hutch)
Above the Law3:56
2Nuthin’ but a G Thang
drum machine programming:
Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer)
producer:
Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer)
mixer:
Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer), Greg “Gregski” Royal (US hip-hop producer, engineer and mixer) and Chris “The Glove” Taylor (US DJ & hip-hop producer)
additional vocals:
Snoop Doggy Dogg (US rapper)
vocals:
Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Interscope Records (part of UMG Recordings, Inc.) (in 1992)
samples:
I Want’a Do Something Freaky to You by Leon Haywood (funk and soul singer, songwriter, record producer)
music videos:
Nuthin’ but a "G" Thang by Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer) feat. Snoop Dogg (US rapper)
part of:
Rolling Stone: 500 Greatest Songs of All Time: 2021 edition (number: 29), Billboard: The 500 Best Pop Songs (as of October 2023) (number: 45) and Rolling Stone: 500 Greatest Songs of All Time (as at 2016-06-10) (number: 419)
recording of:
Nuthin’ but a “G” Thang
writer:
Andre Young (Andre Young, rap producer), Calvin Broadus (aka Snoop Dogg) and Tracy Curry (The D.O.C., rapper Tracy Curry of N.W.A, fka Doc T)
is based on:
I Want’a Do Something Freaky to You
Dr. Dre3.753:58
393 ’Til Infinity
producer:
A‐Plus (underground rapper Adam Carter of Souls of Mischief)
mixer:
Chris Trevett
vocals:
A‐Plus (underground rapper Adam Carter of Souls of Mischief), Opio (Opion Lindsey - US rapper, from Souls of Mischief), Phesto and Tajai
samples:
Heather by Billy Cobham
recording of:
93 ’til Infinity
writer:
Adam Carter (underground rapper Adam Carter of Souls of Mischief), Damani Thompson, Opio Lindsey (Opion Lindsey - US rapper, from Souls of Mischief) and Tajai Massey
Souls of Mischief54:44
4Wopbabalubop
engineer:
Anton Pukshansky
producer:
T-Ray
guest performer:
B‐Real (rapper Louis Freese of Cypress Hill)
performer:
Funkdoobiest
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Sony Music Entertainment Inc. (company owned by Sony Corporation of America from 1991–2004, operated worldwide except in JP; normally not a release label) (in 1993)
Funkdoobiest13:40
5Who Am I (What’s My Name)
executive producer:
Suge Knight (aka Simon)
producer:
Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer)
additional vocals:
Tony Green (US bassist) and Jewell (US R&B singer Jewell Caples/Peyton)
lead vocals:
Snoop Doggy Dogg (US rapper)
vocals:
Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Death Row Records (in 1993) and Interscope Records (part of UMG Recordings, Inc.) (in 1993)
samples:
Atomic Dog by George Clinton (US funk musician)
recording of:
Who Am I (What’s My Name)? (album mix)
writer:
Snoop (US rapper)
publisher:
Suge Publishing
quotes lyrics from:
Atomic Dog
quotes music from:
Atomic Dog
Snoop Doggy Dogg4.34:06
6Drought Season
producer:
Studio Ton
E‐404:19
7Playaz Club
engineer:
Cyrus and Franky J
co-producer:
Gary Hudson (Fly)
producer:
Cyrus Esteban and Franky J
spoken vocals [ladies voice]:
Erica Gilles
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Chrysalis Records (don’t use as an imprint; please use “Chrysalis” instead) (in 1994)
produced for:
Rag Top Records
recorded at:
Graffiti Tunez (Oakland studio; 1991-1994) in Oakland, California, United States
samples:
Private Number by Judy Clay (American soul and gospel singer) & William Bell
recording of:
Playaz Club
writer:
Anthony Forté
publisher:
Rag Top Publishing (BMI; Anthony Forté p.k.a. Rappin’ 4‐Tay)
Rappin’ 4‐Tay54:25
8I Wish
programming:
Skee‐Lo
producer:
Walter “Kandor” Kahn and Skee‐Lo
arranger:
Skee‐Lo
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Scotti Bros. Records (in 1995) and Sunshine (Skee-Lo) (in 1995)
samples:
Spinnin’ by Bernard Wright
music videos:
I Wish by Skee‐Lo
recording of:
I Wish
writer:
Anne Dudley (English score composer), Alvin Flythe, Trevor Horn, Malcolm McLaren and Skee‐Lo
publisher:
Orange Bear Music
quotes lyrics from:
For What It’s Worth
Skee‐Lo44:07
9Renee
producer:
Mr. Sex
Lost Boyz4:51
10California Love (remix)
engineer:
Keston E. Wright (engineer)
assistant producer:
Larry Chatman
co-producer:
2PAC (2Pac, US rapper)
executive producer:
Suge Knight (aka Simon)
producer and mixer:
Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer)
keyboard [keyboards]:
Sean “Barney Rubble” Thomas
percussion:
Carl “Butch” Small (percussionist)
talkbox:
Roger Troutman (funk musician in Zapp)
background vocals:
Dorothy Coleman, Danette Williams (hip hop vocalist) and Barbara Wilson (hip hop vocalist)
lead vocals:
2Pac (US rapper) and Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Death Row Records (in 1995) and Interscope Records (part of UMG Recordings, Inc.) (in 1995)
recorded at:
Can‐Am Recorders in Tarzana, Los Angeles, California, United States
remix of:
California Love (album version) (original/single version) by 2Pac (US rapper) feat. Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer) & Roger Troutman (funk musician in Zapp)
samples:
Intimate Connection by Kleeer and So Ruff, So Tuff by Roger (funk musician in Zapp)
music videos:
California Love (remix) (House Party) by 2Pac (US rapper) feat. Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer) & Roger Troutman (funk musician in Zapp) and California Love (remix) (Mad Max themed) by 2Pac (US rapper) feat. Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer) & Roger Troutman (funk musician in Zapp)
instrumental versions:
California Love (remix instrumental) by 2Pac (US rapper) feat. Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer) & Roger Troutman (funk musician in Zapp)
recording of:
California Love (remix)
lyricist:
James Anderson (US rapper, Death Row Records artist)
writer:
Woody Cunningham, Dr. Dre (Andre Young, rap producer), Norman Durham, Larry Troutman, Roger Troutman (funk musician in Zapp) and Tupac Shakur (2Pac, US rapper)
publisher:
Ain’t Nothin’ Goin’ On but F****n’ Music (aka Ain’t Nothin’ but F****n’ and other variations), Interscope Pearl Music, Joshua’s Dream, Saja Music Co. (Saja Music Company, publisher), Songs of Lastrada (BMI-affiliated), Stonseee Music (ASCAP) and Warner–Tamerlane Publishing Corp. (publisher; do NOT use as release label)
is based on:
California Love (original version)
quotes lyrics from:
West Coast Poplock
quotes lyrics from:
Dance Floor
quotes music from:
Intimate Connection
2Pac feat. Dr. Dre and Roger Troutman3.96:25
11World So Cruel
producer:
Krayzie Bone (of Bone Thugs-n-Harmony)
additional vocals:
Ms. Chaz, Jere Jon and Monique (US hip-hop guest/background singer)
performer:
Run (US rapper Rev. Run of Run-D.M.C)
Flesh‐N‐Bone5:07
12Jayou
recording engineer, producer and mixer:
Cut Chemist and DJ Nu‐Mark
recording of:
Jayou
writer:
Akil (US rapper, a.k.a. Akil the MC, member of Jurassic 5), Courtenay Henderson (L.A. rapper), Lucas MacFadden, Marc 7, Mark Potsic and Charles Stewart (US rapper Chali 2na of Jurassic 5)
Jurassic 54.452:57
13Front 2 Back
recording engineer:
Richard “Segal” Huredia (US hip hop mix engineer) and Lance Pierre
assistant engineer:
Greg Burns (engineer) and Jim McCrone
producer:
Rockwilder (US hip-hop producer, songwriter, engineer, multi-instrumentalist, programmer)
mixer:
Rockwilder (US hip-hop producer, songwriter, engineer, multi-instrumentalist, programmer) and Danny Romero (engineer)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Loud Records, LLC (in 2000)
recorded at:
Encore Studios in Burbank, California, United States and Record One in Sherman Oaks, Los Angeles, California, United States
mixed at:
Skip Saylor Recordings in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States
recording of:
Front 2 Back
writer:
Alvin Joiner and Dana Stinson (US hip-hop producer, songwriter, engineer, multi-instrumentalist, programmer)
Xzibit43:01
14I Got Love
producer:
Bink!
recording of:
I Got Love
writer:
Nathaniel Hale (Nate Dogg) and Roosevelt Harrell
is based on:
I Believe to My Soul
Nate Dogg3:59
15Ice-T Interview With James Hyman, Part 2
performer:
James Hyman
Ice‐T13:10