Ghetto Street Funk Explained

Ghetto Street Funk
Type:studio
Artist:Parental Advisory
Cover:Ghetto Street Funk.jpg
Released:1993
Recorded:1992–1993
Genre:Hip hop
Next Title:Straight No Chase
Next Year:1998

Ghetto Street Funk is the debut studio album by American hip hop trio Parental Advisory.[1] [2] It was released on November 9, 1993, via MCA Records. The recording sessions took place at Bosstown Recording Studios, Studio LaCoCo, and Doppler Studios, in Atlanta. The album was produced by Organized Noize, DJ Toomp, and P.A., with Pebbles serving as executive producer. The album spawned two singles: "Maniac" and "Ghetto Head Hunta". It is also contains a remix of the song "Lifeline", which originally appeared on CB4 (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack).

Track listing

  1. "Strictly Butcher" - 3:34
  2. "Da Boom" - 4:34
  3. "Lifeline" (Remix) - 4:39
  4. "Bullshit" - 0:22
  5. "Maniac" - 4:17
  6. "BB" - 4:33
  7. "Sex in da Morning" - 2:50
  8. "Ghetto Break" (Interlude) - 5:30
  9. "Ghetto Head Hunta" - 3:28
  10. "Let Loose the Lingo" - 4:12
  11. "Manifest" - 4:08
  12. "Milk" - 3:14
  13. "Reyes Not Fall" - 3:58
  14. "Da End" - 0:21

Notes and References

  1. News: Pousner . Howard . Dollar . Steve . Pebbles Pushes Parental Advisory, hopes to copy TLC's rap success . The Atlanta Journal-Constitution . Oct 12, 1993 . C9.
  2. Book: Sarig . Roni . Third Coast: Outkast, Timbaland, and How Hip-hop Became a Southern Thing . 2007 . Hachette Books.