The South Park Psycho: Difference between revisions
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*"Horror Movie Rap": Soundtrack from ''[[Halloween (1978 film)|Halloween]]'' |
*"Horror Movie Rap": Soundtrack from ''[[Halloween (1978 film)|Halloween]]'' |
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*"Psycho": "CEBU" by [[Commodores]] |
*"Psycho": "CEBU" by [[Commodores]] |
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*"Disgusting": [[Nautilus (song)|Nautilus]] by [[Bob James (musician)|Bob James]] |
*"Disgusting": "[[Nautilus (song)|Nautilus]]" by [[Bob James (musician)|Bob James]] |
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*"Slaughter": "[[Straight Outta Compton]]" by [[N.W.A]] |
*"Slaughter": "[[Straight Outta Compton]]" by [[N.W.A]] |
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*"Paranoid": "[[Stranglehold (Ted Nugent song)|Stranglehold]]" by [[Ted Nugent]] |
*"Paranoid": "[[Stranglehold (Ted Nugent song)|Stranglehold]]" by [[Ted Nugent]] |
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*"Damned Shame":[[Dead Homiez]]" by [[Ice Cube]] |
*"Damned Shame": "[[Dead Homiez]]" by [[Ice Cube]] |
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==Later samples== |
==Later samples== |
Revision as of 07:53, 13 July 2018
This article needs additional citations for verification. (October 2012) |
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The South Park Psycho is the first album by the rapper Ganksta N-I-P. It was released on February 26, 1992, through Rap-a-Lot Records. The album has production from Ganksta N-I-P, The Terrorists, John Bido and Doug King. The album is one of the earliest examples of the horrorcore genre, and considered by many[who?] as a Southern hip hop classic.
Guest artists include future routine collaborators, Dope-E, K-Rino, and Seagram. Willie D and Scarface, then of the Geto Boys, also appear on the track "Actions Speak Louder Than Words". This song also appears on the Geto Boys' first greatest hits collection, the 1992 release Uncut Dope: Geto Boys' Best.
Reception
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
The album peaked at #63 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums. The album has long been out-of-print.[2] It gained four stars out of five from Allmusic. The album sold around 100,000 units around the South Park area and helped N-I-P to obtain a contract with Priority Records.[3] The song "Psycho" was ranked #3 most violent hip hop song of all time by Complex.[4]
Track listing
- "Intro" – 1:58 (Producer: Dope-E)
- "Horror Movie Rap" – 3:35 (Producer: Egypt E)
- "Get Out Of The Game" – 5:14 (feat. Dope-E)
- "Rough Brothers From South Park" – 5:24 (feat. K-Rino, Dope-E, Point Blank)
- "Black Godfather" – 5:03
- "Psycho" – 4:20
- "Action Speaks Louder Than Words" – 5:53 (feat. Scarface, Willie D, Seagram)
- "Ganksta Mac" – 4:43
- "Smokin Amp" – 3:55
- "Disgusting" – 4:39
- "H Town" – 4:44 (Producer: Dope-E)
- "Slaughter" – 4:19
- "Paranoid" – 4:36
- "Damned Shame" – 4:20
Samples
- "Horror Movie Rap": Soundtrack from Halloween
- "Psycho": "CEBU" by Commodores
- "Disgusting": "Nautilus" by Bob James
- "Slaughter": "Straight Outta Compton" by N.W.A
- "Paranoid": "Stranglehold" by Ted Nugent
- "Damned Shame": "Dead Homiez" by Ice Cube
Later samples
"Psycho"
- "That's How It Is: Psychic, Pt. 2" on the album Psychic Thoughtsby Ganksta N-I-P
- "Fuck You" on the album Psychic Thoughts by Ganksta N-I-P
- "Still Psycho" on the album Still Psycho by Ganksta N-I-P
- "The Violence of the Lambs" on the album Acid Reflexby Paris
- "Paranoid"
- "Skitso" on the album Little Big Man by Bushwick Bill
- "Strangehold" by Ted Nugent
Credits
- Engineer: Peter Reardon
- Mixed by: Bido
- Production co-ordinator: Tony Randle
- Producer: Crazy C, Doug King, Ganksta N-I-P*, John Bido, The Terrorists
- Written by: Dope E, Ganksta N-I-P, Scarface, Seagram, Willie D
Charts
Chart (1992) | Peak position |
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Top R&B Albums | 63 |