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Paid Tha Cost to Be Da Boss

Paid Tha Cost to Be Da Boss
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  • List Price: $11.94
  • Buy New: $3.58
  • as of 5/26/2012 15:12 EDT details
  • You Save: $8.36 (70%)
In Stock
New (64) Used (102) from $0.01
  • Seller:Media Maniac's
  • Sales Rank:7,133
  • Format:Explicit Lyrics
  • Language:English (Original Language)
  • Media:Audio CD
  • Discs:1
  • Shipping Weight (lbs):0.2
  • Dimensions (in):5.6 x 5 x 0.5
  • Release Date:November 26, 2002
  • MPN:3 3 00539157
  • UPC:724353915728
  • EAN:0072435391572
  • ASIN:B000075A20
Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • SNOOP DOGG PAID THA COST BE DA BOSS

Tracks
  • Don Doggy
  • Da Bo$$ Would Like To See You
  • Stoplight
  • From Tha Chuuuch To Da Palace (featuring Pharrell)
  • I Believe In You (featuring Latoiya Williams)
  • Lollipop (featuring Jay-Z, Soopafly, Nate Dogg)
  • Ballin' (featuring The Dramatics, Lil' Half Dead)
  • Beautiful (featuring Pharrell, Uncle Charlie Wilson)
  • Paper'd Up (featuring Mr. Kane, Traci Nelson)
  • Wasn't Your Fault
  • Bo$$ Playa
  • Hourglass (featuring Mr. Kane, Goldie Loc)
  • The One And Only
  • I Miss That Bitch (featuring E-White)
  • From Long Beach 2 Brick City (featuring Redman, Nate Dogg, Warren G)
  • Suited N Booted
  • You Got What I Want (featuring Ludacris, Goldie Loc, Uncle Charlie Wilson)
  • Batman & Robin (featuring Lady Of Rage, RBX)
  • A Message 2 Fat Cuzz
  • Pimp Slapp'd


Editorial Reviews:
Synopsis
SNOOP DOGG PAID THA COST BE DA BOSS
Amazon.com
Despite the middling quality of his previous two albums, Snoop Dogg's sixth full-length effort firmly places this "professor of G-ology" back on top of the game. Snoop comes off surprisingly spry on Paid tha Cost, offering one of his best-balanced albums in years. His pimpalistic style is still draped in silk and fur, especially on "Bo$$ Playa," "Suited 'n' Booted," and "Ballin'." But "I Believe in You" is an unexpectedly sensitive, irony-free love ballad, while Snoop's pairings with the Neptunes and Gang Starr's DJ Premier result in two of his hardest hitting cuts ever, "From tha Chuuuch to da Palace" and "The One and Only" respectively. Combine this with his unfettered attack on Suge Knight ("Pimp Slapp'd") and this is a Snoop Dogg charging forward rather than lazily leaning back. Taking the helm at the dawn of the new decade, this old Dogg still has some new tricks. --Oliver Wang

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