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D.J. Cash Money - Guess Who's Comin' To Dinner album flac

D.J. Cash Money - Guess Who's Comin' To Dinner album flac Performer: D.J. Cash Money
Title: Guess Who's Comin' To Dinner
Released: 1996
Country: US
MP3 album: 1906 mb
FLAC album: 1841 mb
Rating: 4.9
Other formats: MP1 MIDI AC3 MOD DXD MMF AHX
Genre: Hip-hop

Guess Who's Coming to Dinner is a 1967 American comedy-drama film produced and directed by Stanley Kramer, and written by William Rose.

Jimmy Heath, Chris Martin. 3. I Shot Ya. J. Brown, LL Cool J, Jean-Claude Olivier. feat: LL Cool J. 4. Real Live Shot. 5. Guess Who's Coming to Dinner.

Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (album). Guess Who's Coming to Dinner is a reggae album by Black Uhuru.

Originally Michael Rose’s 1976 single, Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner – alternatively known as Dreadlocks Coming for Dinner – was rerecorded as a group effort for their 1979 Showcase (essentially an EP). This was to be one of their first major hits following their name change to Black Uhuru (Black Freedom) after their previous album with then Prince Jammy, and adding Sandra Puma Jones and Sly & Robbie to their lineup. It remains a standard. What makes the song important? One of Reggae’s most iconic songs, featuring early production from the legendary duo Sly & Robbie

Read movie quotes from the famous Stanley Kramer film Guess Who's Coming to Dinner. Starring Spencer Tracy, Sidney Poitier, and Katharine Hepburn. Quotations from Guess Who's Coming to Dinner. Guess Who's Coming to Dinner is a drama flm about interracial marriage, which was illegal in 17 states during this films release. This film is known as the last film of Spencer Tracy and the final pairing of Tracy and Hepburn. Tracy died just 17 days after filming ended. Due to this, Hepburn is said to have never seen the film, due to the pain of having to see him on screen in his last performance. It was nominated for one Oscar award.

Album · 1980 · 7 Songs. There’s something biblical and prophetic about this Black Uhuru masterpiece. Michael Rose sings with a kind of eerie authority, his voice piercing the lyrics and providing a needed counterbalance to Sly & Robbie’s humid, weighty rhythms.

Tracklist

A1 D.J. Cash Money* Intro
A2 Group Home Tha Realness
A3 LL Cool J I Shot Ya (Remix)
A4 K-Def & Larry-O Real Live Shot
A5 Bahamadia / Q-Tip / Busta Rhymes / Phife Dawg / The Roots / Biz Markie Guess Who's Coming To Dinner
B1 Commercial
B2 Greg Nice Set If Off
B3 Busta Rhymes In Check
B4 Big Noyd Recognize & Realize
C1 Raekwon Incarcerated Scarface
C2 All City Who Dat?
C3 Group Home Up Against The Wall
C4 D.J. Cash Money* Where Ya From Cash?
D1 Commercial
D2 The Genius Cold World
D3 Jamal Insane Creation
D4 Intro Fab5* Funny How Time Flies / LeFlah
D5 Introducing Nima

Credits

  • DJ Mix – D.J. Cash Money*

Other versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
9005 SBO D.J. Cash Money* Guess Who's Comin' To Dinner, Vol. 2 WKIS FM ‎(CD, Mixed) Spoiled Brat Recordings 9005 SBO US 1996
9005 SBO D.J. Cash Money* Guess Who's Comin' To Dinner, Vol. 2 WKIS FM ‎(Cass, Album) Spoiled Brat Recordings 9005 SBO US 1996
Comments: (1)
Landaron
Wow! As a friend of mine pointed out correctly: This is the best Hip Hop mixtape on vinyl from the 90s. Better than 60 Minutes of Funk Vol. 1 by Funkmaster Flex which by itself is an unstoppable killer Hip Hop mix.What you get here is the usual way this music was presented in the 90s. Hip Hop works in a mix of 12 inches, using acapellas, instrumentals, cutting up double copies, freestyle features, etc.. This mix is designed for "home listening", while Funkmaster Flex brings more of the club vibes of that time. (Both are of course great DJs.) I saw Ca$h Money in a Club twice and I will never forget it: He simply destroyed that place... everybody in Berlin was jumping all night (ca. 2000). He started the night in Globus (the upper floor of the famous Tresor Club in Berlin) with the recent Hit that everybody wanted to hear that was I Just Wanna Love U (Give It To Me) by Jay-Z (Neptunes Production) and from there he went all the way back to 1979, cutting up C.A.$.H. rules everything arround me - Cream get's the money (Wu-Tang), Time For Some Action by Redman and Dollar Bill by Jimmy Spicer in between and shouting in that microphone at the same time. Everybody just went nuts. This guy has some serious DJ skills. Memories.The sound quality is a bit like a tape on vinyl, don't expect too much here.One can pick up tons of cool 90s Hip Hop 12" which are by the way so underrated these days (I mean price wise) as only them will give you the full sound quality compared to the LPs. To get an idea how this music was heard in context, this is a great and inexpensive way to start.The LP has "funny" commercial skits and freestyles by Bahamadia and Q-Tip. The track list shows some underground classics, that you probably have in your collection, ok, but this is really about the presentation. For example he uses two promos of "Woo Hah!! Got You All In Check" by Busta Rhymes and works the Acapella over the original Instrumental and cuts it up as if you are in a Jamaican Dance Hall. Have I mentioned the Greg Nice or the Jamal track yet? Every track you think you know, you really don't, if it is presented the way Ca$h Money does.