Greatest Hits CLEAN VERSION Ice Cube

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CD

  • Release Date: 12/04/2001
  • Sales Rank: 101,941
  • Label: PRIORITY RECORDS
  • UPC: 724352909223
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CD$11.59

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Greatest Hits

1LISTENPushin' Weight / Mr. Short Khop 3:53
2LISTENCheck Yo Self Remix 3:53
3LISTENWe Be Clubbin' 4:48
4LISTEN$100 Dollar Bill Ya'll 3:42
5LISTENOnce Upon a Time in the Projects 4:04
6LISTENBow Down Westside Connection 3:26
7LISTENHello / MC Ren 3:51
8LISTENYou Can Do It / Mack 10 4:19
9LISTENYou Know How We Do It 3:47
10LISTENIt Was a Good Day 4:20
11LISTENBop Gun (One Nation) / George Clinton Radio Edit 4:47
12LISTENWhat Can I Do Remix 4:24
13LISTENMy Summer Vacation 3:30
14LISTENSteady Mobbin' 4:10
15LISTENJackin' for Beats 2:25
16LISTENThe ***** Ya Love to Hate 3:08
17LISTENLate Night Hour 3:56

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Although the 17-track Greatest Hits covers all phases of Ice Cube's solo career in an extremely balanced fashion, it isn't quite the last word on one of the most seminal figures in hardcore and gangsta rap. It is definitely a worthwhile purchase, since it collects all the best singles from Cube's more uneven latter-day efforts; there are also two new cuts (although "In the Late Night Hour" has a lot of rewritten N.W.A. rhymes) and a couple that have never appeared on an Ice Cube album: the soundtrack contribution "We Be Clubbin'" and the Westside Connection single "Bow Down" (which are nice for collectors but not all that essential). That occasional filler makes it all the more frustrating that the classic "Dead Homiez" is inexcusably nowhere to be found, and that it apparently wasn't possible to license Cube's duet with Dr. Dre on "Natural Born Killaz." Selection issues aside, the singles from the post-Predator era prove that in his best moments, Cube could be a credible radio-crossover artist and keep up with contemporary production trends. As a storyteller (a facet of his work that's underrepresented here), Cube had a knack for keenly observed detail, as evidenced on "Once Upon a Time in the Projects" and his laid-back masterpiece "It Was a Good Day." Still, it doesn't quite add up to a classic compilation. Perhaps the problem is that while Greatest Hits is a fine, listenable portrait of Ice Cube the sometime-hitmaker and full-time hip-hop celebrity, it doesn't completely capture the provocative, incendiary qualities that made him an icon in the first place (for that, listeners will have to go back to AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted and Death Certificate). For a fully fleshed-out picture of Cube's career, though, Greatest Hits is a very good place to go. [Greatest Hits was also released in a clean version with all the profanities edited out. Since Ice Cube is quite possibly the angriest rapper who ever lived, this slices huge chunks out of some songs and totally disrupts the flow of the music; unless you're a radio programmer or a teenager with strict parents, it's really pointless.] Steve Huey, All Music Guide

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