Neva Again

Neva Again
Studio album by Kam
Released February 16, 1993
Studio Echo Sound, Paramound Studios
Genre West Coast hip hop, gangsta rap, political hip hop, G-funk
Length 42:58
Label
Producer Ice Cube (exec.), DJ Pooh, Coze, Stan Jones, Stone, Toothie, Solid Scheme, Rashad, T-Bone, Mr. Woody
Kam chronology
Neva Again
(1993)
Made in America
(1995)Made in America1995
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Q[2]
RapReviews.com10/10[3]
The Source[4]

Neva Again is the debut album by West Coast hip hop artist Kam. It is executive produced by Kam's cousin Ice Cube and produced by a variety of West Coast producers including DJ Pooh, Rashad and Chris Charity. It features no guest vocalists besides Ice Cube on "Watts Riot." In addition, DJ Train, DJ Pooh and Brian G provide scratches on various tracks and Anthony "Soup" Holmes plays keyboards on one song. It is a highly acclaimed yet rather unknown album. Critics support it for its G-funk beats and socially conscious lyrics.

Track listing

# Title Time Producer(s) Performer(s) Sample(s)
1 "Intro" 1:15 Coze
Stan Jones
Stone
Toothie
Kam
2 "Peace Treaty" 4:18 Solid Scheme Kam
3 "Stereotype" 4:30 Rashad Kam
4 "Still Got Love 4 'Um" 4:23 T-Bone Kam
  • Contains a sample of "Come on Sexy Mama" by The Moments
5 "Hang 'Um High" 3:41 Coze
Stan Jones
Stone
Toothie
Kam
  • Contains a sample of "Riding High" by Faze-O
  • Contains a sample of "I Wanna Kill Sam" by Ice Cube
6 "Drama" 3:48 Mr. Woody Kam
7 "Neva Again" 3:39 Rashad Kam
  • Contains a sample of "Jungle Boogie" by Kool & the Gang
  • Contains a sample of "Flash Light" by Parliament
  • Contains a sample of "Heartbreaker" by Zapp
8 "Y'all Don't Here Me Dough" 3:30 Mr. Woody Kam
  • Contains a sample of "Atomic Dog" by George Clinton
  • Contains a sample of "Bounce, Rock, Skate, Roll" by Mason, Vaughn & Crew
9 "Ain't That a Bitch" 4:03 Solid Scheme Kam
  • Contains a sample of "Sing a Simple Song" by Sly & the Family Stone
10 "Holiday Madness" 3:58 Coze
Stan Jones
Stone
Toothie
Kam
  • Contains a sample of "Soul Power '74" by Maceo & the Macks
  • Contains a sample of "Sing a Simple Song" by Sly & the Family Stone
  • Contains a sample of "Papa Was Too (Live)" by Joe Tex
11 "Watts Riot" 3:49 DJ Pooh Kam
Ice Cube
12 "Outro" 2:21 Coze
Stan Jones
Stone
Toothie
Kam

Chart positions

Chart (1993) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard 200 110
U.S. Top R&B Albums 18

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.