What Is Beef in Rap Wikipedia

2003 American film

Beef
Beefcover.jpg
Directed by Peter Spirer
Written by Peter Alton
Peter Spirer
Produced by Denis Hennelly
Casey Suchan and Peter Spirer
Narrated by Ving Rhames
Cinematography Sean Adair
Peter Alton
Jeff Bollman
Dean Raimondo
Edited by Peter Alton
Music by J-Strength
Quincy Jones Iii
Femi Ojetunde
Distributed by Image Amusement

Release date

  • August 2003 (2003-08)

Running fourth dimension

103 minutes
184 minutes (Extended)
Land The states
Language English

Beef is a 2003 American documentary film directed by Peter Spirer about the history of hip-hop feuds. Produced by Peter Spirer, Casey Suchan and Denis Henry Hennelly and executive produced by Quincy Jones III (QD3), the film was written by Peter Alton and Spirer, and narrated past player Ving Rhames.[i]

Content [edit]

Beef takes a chronological look at battles (some friendly, but many personal) dating back to rap music'southward infancy in the early 1980s. The notable rivalries discussed include KRS-One vs. MC Shan, Kool Moe Dee vs. Decorated Bee, 50 Cent vs. Murder Inc Records, Tru Life vs. Mobb Deep, Common vs. Ice Cube & Westside Connection, the break-up of legendary group N.W.A, which includes Ice Cube's sharp departure, and the subsequently antagonism between Dr. Dre and Eazy-Due east, the highly publicized Jay-Z vs. Nas rivalry and the almost infamous feud of all, 2Pac vs. The Notorious B.I.Grand. It was partly born out of producer Jones's conventionalities that "Beefs are killing hip-hop".[2]

Many prominent hip-hop personalities such every bit Russell Simmons, Snoop Dogg, Kool Moe Dee, Jay-Z, KRS-One, Mack 10, DMX and Ice-T too participate through interviews (some produced for the motion picture, as well as archived interviews from other sources, such as MTV and BET clips). Beefiness too features newly released performances past many musical artists.

The film too contains never-before-seen performances by many of the participants and many others, plus extended portions of interviews that did not brand terminal cut. One portion of the extended interviews features part of an interview with Nate Dogg talking about an incident that occurred around 1995 at a Dogg Pound video shoot, in which entourage members representing Ruthless Records showed up and started a big brawl with members of then-rival Decease Row Records. Although he did not mention them by name (he yet subtlety mentioned the duo's less-than-successful 1995 album Real Brothaz), rappers B.G. Knocc Out and Dresta (who participated in Eazy-E'southward hit diss recording, Existent Muthaphuckkin One thousand's) were amid the alleged participants in the fight.

Disquisitional reaction [edit]

The Los Angeles Times chosen information technology "engrossing" and "a moving lament for the mode hip-hop in one case was".[iii]

Complex rated it number 10 in its 25 best hiphop documentaries, calling information technology a "archetype hip hop doc".[4]

Soundtrack [edit]

Beef
Soundtrack album by

Various Artists

Released October 7, 2003 (2003-ten-07)
Genre Rap
Label Strange Music/MSC Entertainment
Singles from Beefiness (Soundtrack)
  1. "Let'south Go[v]"
    Released: 2003
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic link
  1. "No Vaseline" by Ice Cube
  2. "Beef" by Tech N9ne featuring Krizz Kaliko
  3. "You lot Don't Really Desire It" by KRS-One
  4. "Westside Slaughterhouse" past Westside Connection
  5. "Murder by #'s" by Skatterman & Snug Brim featuring Ricky Scarfo
  6. "Drama" past Prodigy featuring Twin
  7. "Existent Muthaphuckkin Grand's" by Eazy-E featuring B.G. Knocc Out and Dresta
  8. "Caution" by Black Kid
  9. "When The Pelting Drops" past Kutt Calhoun featuring Snug Brim
  10. "That'south It" by KRS-One featuring Mad King of beasts
  11. "Postman" by Poverty
  12. "Now I Run into" past MC Shan
  13. "Snake Ya" by Tech N9ne featuring Krizz Kaliko
  14. "Let's Go (It's A Movement)" by Warren Thousand featuring KRS-One and Lil' AI
  15. "Witness Protection" by Jayo Felony
  16. "Day I Dice" by Tru-Life
  17. "Fuck Tha Law" past N.W.A

Legacy [edit]

Subsequent releases in this series include Beef II (2004, also produced by Suchan and Hennelly, and narrated past actor Keith David), Beef iii (2005, narrated by DJ Kay Slay) and a BET serial titled Beef: The Series, which premiered in 2006. These sequels are a continuation of the original motion-picture show, but cover lesser-known confrontations and developing beefs just prior to the release of each respective installment. They include LL Cool J vs. Canibus, Ja Dominion vs. DMX, l Cent vs. The Game, Lil' Flip vs. T.I., Nelly vs. Chingy, and Erick Sermon vs. EPMD partner Parrish Smith. In 2011, Spirer speculated on the possibility of a fourth film, suggesting he was a little tired of the "he said/she said" drama but he might produce further specials in hereafter.[6]

See also [edit]

  • Beef II
  • Beef: The Series

References [edit]

  1. ^ Borzillo-Vrenna, Carrie (August 1, 2003). "50 takes on Ja in "Beef"". Rolling Rock.
  2. ^ Brown, Ethan. "Got Beef?". New York . Retrieved Baronial 2, 2013.
  3. ^ Dreisinger, Baz (September 28, 2003). "Of hip-hop's feuds in verse -- and worse". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved August 2, 2013.
  4. ^ Cosme, Shante (June xviii, 2012). "Beef (2003)". Complex . Retrieved August two, 2013.
  5. ^ "Strange Music Online Store - Let's Go Vinyl". Archived from the original on June 12, 2010. Retrieved July 1, 2008.
  6. ^ Spirer, Peter (December 12, 2011). "Invitee Star: "I Kind Of Got Beef'd Out After The 3rd One"". SOHH. Archived from the original on June 24, 2013. Retrieved August 2, 2013.

External links [edit]

  • Beef at IMDb
  • Beef at AllMovie

henriquezforthis.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beef_(film)

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