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No One Can Do It Better

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Recorded
  
1989

No One Can Do It Better(1989)
  
Helter Skelter(1996)

Release date
  
1 August 1989

Producers
  
Eazy-E (exec.), Dr. Dre

Length
  
48:25

Artist
  
The D.O.C.

Genre
  
West Coast hip hop

No One Can Do It Better httpsimagesrapgeniuscom14e368915c91830c2abd4

Released
  
August 1, 1989 (1989-08-01)

Studio
  
Audio Achievements, Torrance, California

No One Can Do It Better (1989)
  
100 Miles and Runnin'(1990)

Similar
  
The DOC albums, West Coast hip hop albums

The d o c it s funky enough no one can do it better


No One Can Do It Better is The D.O.C.'s debut album, released on August 1, 1989. It reached number-one on the US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart for two weeks, while peaking in the Top 20 on the Billboard 200 chart. The album was certified Gold by the RIAA three months after it was released, and Platinum on April 21, 1994. This was the only solo album The D.O.C. was able to record before a car accident resulted in crushing his larynx; in recent years, however, he has been undergoing vocal surgery. He would not release another album until 7 years later, with Helter Skelter (1996).

Contents

The d o c no one can do it better full album


Album information

Idolizing East Coast acts such as Run-D.M.C. and Public Enemy, The D.O.C. always showed more of a lyrical style, not talking about guns, drugs and violence. The album received a Parental Advisory sticker because of the final track on the album ("The Grand Finalé"). Most of the songs were influenced and sampled from funk artists such as Marvin Gaye, Parliament, and Funkadelic, but one track in particular was influenced by other genres, "Beautiful But Deadly", a rock-hip hop track, influenced by Run-D.M.C. with a heavy guitar riff throughout the song (it borrows from Funkadelic's Cosmic Slop).

All five then-current members of N.W.A contributed to this album. Beats were produced by Dr. Dre, with Eazy-E being the executive producer. Dre, Ice Cube, MC Ren and Eazy all provide vocals for "The Grand Finalé", while Ren also provides vocals for "Comm. 2". Yella performs on "Comm. Blues", "Comm. 2" and "The Grand Finalé" as a drummer.

No One Can Do It Better also features additional vocals by Krazy Dee (who also co-wrote the N.W.A song "Panic Zone" from N.W.A. and the Posse), J. J. Fad, Yomo & Maulkie and Michel'le, who were all part of Ruthless as well. Andre "L.A. Dre" Bolton and Stan "The Guitar Man" Jones, who play keyboards and guitar on some of the tracks respectively, also worked for the label.

Critical reception

In a contemporary review for The Village Voice, music critic Robert Christgau said that the first three songs have music that is funky, multi-dimensional, and engaging, but the rest of the album's funk diminishes and leaves listeners having to focus on D.O.C.'s inferior lyrics. In a retrospective review, Allmusic stated, "It's a shame that the D.O.C. never got the chance for a proper follow-up, but in No One Can Do It Better, he at least has one undeniable masterpiece." RapReviews wrote, "It's hard to adequately describe how much of an unbelievable pleasure it is to listen to "No One Can Do it Better," an album that not only exceeds the expectations anyone had for D.O.C. at the time but which goes down as an unqualified classic in the history of hip-hop." In 1998, the album was listed in The Source's 100 Best Rap Albums.

Track listing

  • All tracks produced by Dr. Dre
  • Cut Tracks

  • "Bridgette" - cut from the album because of the sexual content, later released on the Dr. Dre bootleg First Round Knock Out
  • Songs

    1It’s Funky Enough4:29
    2Mind Blowin’3:37
    3Lend Me an Ear3:21

    References

    No One Can Do It Better Wikipedia


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