Listening Journey
G-Funk Summer
Compton 1992-1996 in six cuts. The synth-bass-and-Parliament-Funkadelic blueprint Dr. Dre laid down on *The Chronic* (Dec 1992) becomes, within two summers, the dominant sound of American pop radio.
- 01
Dre's vocal-and-synth co-presence with Snoop on the lead single from *The Chronic*. The Leon Haywood 'I Want'a Do Something Freaky to You' interpolation establishes the chordal palette every subsequent G-funk record cribs from.
- 02" Let Me Ride " (1993)— Dr. Dre
*The Chronic*'s second-single follow-up. The video (a procession through Compton in a '64 Impala) becomes the visual shorthand for the entire sound. The Parliament 'Mothership Connection' sample makes the lineage explicit.
- 03" Gin and Juice " (1994)
Snoop's solo debut *Doggystyle* (Nov 1993) entered the Billboard 200 at #1 — the first debut album by any artist to do so. 'Gin and Juice' is the radio single that confirms what 'G Thang' suggested: Snoop's drawl is the new American pop-rap voice.
- 04" Regulate " (1994)— Warren G ft. Nate Dogg
Off the *Above the Rim* soundtrack — Warren G (Dre's stepbrother) and Nate Dogg (Warren's high-school friend and the era's most distinctive melodic-rap voice) over a Michael McDonald 'I Keep Forgettin' sample. Peaks at #2 on the Hot 100.
- 05
Tupac's first release after leaving prison (Interscope had bailed him out at Suge Knight's urging). Dre returns to provide the lone Death Row beat he'd give Pac before their split. #1 on the Hot 100 for two weeks.
- 06" How Do U Want It " (1996)
Off *All Eyez on Me* (Feb 1996), the four-LP-worth-of-material rap album that finalizes Pac's Death Row tenure. The G-funk template is on its last legs commercially — by '97 it'll be displaced by the No Limit/Cash Money Southern sound — but this is the moment of maximum reach.
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