Doggy Dogg World
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| “Doggy Dogg World” | |||||
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| Single by Snoop Dogg featuring Kurupt, Daz Dillinger & The Dramatics from the album Doggystyle |
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| Released | June, 1994(UK) | ||||
| Format | 12-inch single | ||||
| Recorded | 1993 | ||||
| Genre | G-Funk | ||||
| Length | 5:38 | ||||
| Label | Death Row Records | ||||
| Writer(s) | D. Arnaud Richard Fields R. Brown C. Broadus |
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| Producer | Dr. Dre | ||||
| Snoop Dogg singles chronology | |||||
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Doggy Dogg World is the third single from Snoop Dogg's debut album Doggystyle. It is the first European-only release with an American video TV-play. It features '70s funk band The Dramatics, with cameo rapping from Kurupt and Daz Dillinger members of Tha Dogg Pound. , and chorus singing by background vocalist Nancy Fletcher. It samples Richard "Dimples" Fields's "If it Ain't One Thing, It's Another" from his 1982 album Mr. Look So Good.
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[edit] Video
This retro style video takes us back to the world of seventies. It presents Snoop as a pimpish owner of an old fashioned music club where a Dramatics live concert and party is going on. The video is also 5:38 long but with the ending vocals shortened in order to insert a minute long intro with director Ricky Harris in the role of "the host for the night" meeting Snoop and his women entourage in the V.I.P. section, while silhouettes of dancing girls can be seen in the background and Parliament's "Give Up the Funk (Tear the Roof off the Sucker)" can be heard as an incidental music (from their 1976 album Mothership Connection). The video is a 1994 winner of an MTV Video Music Award for Best Rap Video. It was released as a segment of the video compilation VHS called Murder Was The Case in the same year. It has a numerous cameo casting :
[edit] Casting
by Anissa Williams
In order of appearance
- Snoop Dogg as Silky Slim
- The Dramatics as themselves
- Antonio Fargas as Huggy Bear
- Ricky Harris as TaaDow
- Fred Berry as Re-Run
- Fred Williamson as The Hammer
- Kurupt as Small Change Willy from Philly
- Dr. Dre as Fortieth St. Black
- The Lady of Rage as a dice gambler
- Rudy Ray Moore as Dolemite
- Pam Grier as Foxxxy Brown
- Daz as Sugafoot
- Ron O'Neal as Supa Fly
[edit] Remixes
- A Trance remix called Perfecto mix done by Paul Oakenfold appeared on the re-prints of the single and on an 1995 compilation album called The Perfecto Album.
[edit] External links
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