Dr. Dre
Dr. Dre & Justus & Mez
Dr. Dre & Marsha Ambrosius & Candice Pillay & Kendrick Lamar
Dr. Dre & Justus & BJ the Chicago Kid
Dr. Dre & Anderson .Paak & Marsha Ambrosius
Dr. Dre & Marsha Ambrosius & Mez & Kendrick Lamar
Dr. Dre & Sly Pyper & Cold 187um & Xzibit
Dr. Dre & Ice Cube & Anderson .Paak & Dem Jointz
Dr. Dre & Anderson .Paak & Kendrick Lamar & Justus
Jon Connor & Snoop Dogg
The Game & Asiahn
Dr. Dre & Anderson .Paak & Jill Scott & Jon Connor
Dr. Dre & Marsha Ambrosius & Mez & Snoop Dogg
Dr. Dre & Anderson .Paak
Dr. Dre & Candice Pillay & Anderson .Paak & Eminem
Dr. Dre
The dramatic intro to Dr. Dre’s final album provides an overview on the city and its reputation, setting the scene like an introduction to a movie. This is perfectly fitting considering this is the self-proclaimed “Soundtrack” to Compton.
The news report sounds like a young Bill Kurtis in the 1980’...
[Intro]
Compton was the American dream. Sunny California with a palm tree in the front yard, the camper, the boat. Temptingly close to the Los Angeles ghetto in the 50's and 60's, it became "The Black American Dream." Open housing paved the way as middle-class blacks flooded into the city. Whites don't buy houses in Compton anymore. Now with 74% of the population, black power is the fact of life. From banks to bowling alleys. But the dream that many blacks thought they were buying has turned sour. Though the mayor and four out of five city councilmen are black, they have been unable to solve the problems of crime and growing welfare which is slowing turning suburban Compton into an extension of the black inner city. Crime is now as high as the ghetto. 47 homicides last year gave Compton one of the highest per capita rates in the country. Juvenile gang activity, muggings, small robberies make some blacks want to leave
Intro (Compton) was written by Dontae Winslow & Focus… & Dr. Dre.
Intro (Compton) was produced by Dontae Winslow & Dr. Dre & Focus….
Dr. Dre released Intro (Compton) on Fri Aug 07 2015.