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The Collection
Compilation album series by
ReleasedNovember 24, 1998 (Volume One)
November 14, 2000 (Volume Two)
Recorded1993-1998 & 1994-2000
Genre
Length1:07:56 & 54:95
LabelRuthless
ProducerVolume One:
DJ Yella, DJ U-Neek, Mariah Carey, Stevie J, Puff Daddy, L. T. Hutton, Damon Elliott, & Krayzie Bone
Volume Two:
LT Hutton, Craig B, KLC, Rick 'Disco Rick' Taylor, Jermaine Dupri, DJ U-Neek
Bone Thugs-N-Harmony chronology
The Art of War
(1997)
The Collection
(1998)
BTNHResurrection
(2000)
Volume Two
Volume One:
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusiclink
Entertainment WeeklyA- link
Q[1]
Robert Christgaulink
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[2]
Volume Two:
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusiclink
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[2]

The Collection is an album series by American hip hop group Bone Thugs-N-Harmony. Volume One, consisting of hit songs between 1994 and 1998, was released on November 24, 1998, on Ruthless Records. Volume Two was released in 2000.

'B.N.K' is a remake of a song by Eazy-E entitled 'Black Nigga Killa'. The original version, with 3 verses by Eazy-E and none by Bone Thugs-n-Harmony, can be found on Ruthless Records Tenth Anniversary: Decade of Game.

  • 2Reception

Track listing[edit]

Volume 1
No.TitleProducer(s)Length
1.'Foe Tha Love Of $' (featuring Eazy-E & Shatasha Williams)DJ Yella9:05
2.'1st Of Tha Month'DJ U-Neek5:12
3.'Shoot 'Em Up'DJ U-Neek5:15
4.'Days Of Our Livez'DJ U-Neek5:49
5.'Breakdown (Mo Thugs Remix)' (featuring Mariah Carey)Mariah Carey, Stevie J, Sean 'Puffy' Combs4:57
6.'Notorious Thugs' (featuring The Notorious B.I.G.)Stevie J, Sean 'Puffy' Combs6:02
7.'B.N.K.' (featuring Eazy-E)LT Hutton5:00
8.'War (Battlecry Remix)'Damon Elliott3:26
9.'Crossroad (Original Mix)'DJ U-Neek3:32
10.'Body Rott'DJ U-Neek5:01
11.'Thuggish Ruggish Bone' (featuring Shatasha Williams)DJ U-Neek4:40
12.'Fuck Tha Police (Remix)'Krayzie Bone5:01
13.'P.O.D.' (bonus track)DJ U-Neek4:26
14.'If I Could Teach The World (D.J. U-Neek Remix)' (European bonus track)DJ U-Neek4:54
Volume 2
No.TitleProducer(s)Length
1.'C Land I.A.' (Bizzy Bone & Flesh-N-Bone)LT Hutton4:31
2.'Don't Hate On Me' (Krayzie Bone featuring Jermaine Dupri & Da Brat)Jermaine Dupri4:13
3.'Thug Luv' (featuring 2Pac)DJ U-Neek5:07
4.'Hook It Up' (featuring Master P & Silkk The Shocker)KLC & Craig B2:51
5.'2 Glocks (U-Neek's Remix)'DJ U-Neek4:35
6.'Look Into My Eyes (Atlantis Remix)'DJ U-Neek4:49
7.'All Good' (Krayzie Bone featuring Felecia)'Disco' Rick Taylor3:56
8.'Weedman' (Bizzy Bone featuring Blulight)DJ U-Neek3:56
9.'Frontline Warriors' (Bizzy Bone & Layzie Bone featuring Big B)LT Hutton4:08
10.'Change The World (U-Neek's Remix)' (featuring Big B)DJ U-Neek5:19
11.'Can't Give It Up (Rock Remix)'LT Hutton5:10
12.'Ghetto Cowboy' (Krayzie Bone & Layzie Bone featuring Powder P, Thug Queen & Felecia)Krayzie Bone5:24
13.'Sleepwalkers' (featuring Eazy-E)DJ U-Neek3:32

Reception[edit]

'A fine introduction to the harmonious outfit's strangely smooth, yet sweary sound.' – Tom Doyle, Q.[3]

DVD Easter egg[edit]

In the DVD special features section, go to 'Change the World' (extended version) and press the right arrow button; this will take you to six Bone Thugs-n-Harmony commercials. Installing osmo software upgrade roomba 400 series.

References[edit]

ZipWar
  1. ^Q, February 1999
  2. ^ abThe new Rolling Stone album guide - Nathan Brackett, Christian David Hoard - Google Books. Books.google.com. Retrieved 2012-06-25.
  3. ^Q, February 1999
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Collection_(album_series)&oldid=866256810'
E. 1999 Eternal
Studio album by
ReleasedJuly 25, 1995
RecordedAugust 1994 – May 1995
StudioTrax Recording Studios (Los Angeles, California, U.S.)
Genre
Length57:18(clean version)
68:06 (explicit version)
71:52 (re-release)
Label
Producer
  • Eazy-E(exec.)
  • DJ U-Neek(exec.)
  • Tony C
  • Kenny McCloud
Bone Thugs-n-Harmony chronology
Creepin on ah Come Up
(1994)
E. 1999 Eternal
(1995)
The Art of War
(1997)
Singles from E. 1999 Eternal
  1. '1st of tha Month'
    Released: June 15, 1995
  2. 'East 1999'
    Released: November 21, 1995
  3. 'Tha Crossroads'
    Released: February 1, 1996

E. 1999 Eternal is the second studio album by American hip hop group Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, released July 25, 1995, on Ruthless Records. The album was released four months after the death of rapper Eazy-E, the group's mentor and the executive producer of the album. Both the album and single 'Tha Crossroads' are dedicated to him. Following up on the surprise success of their breakthrough single 'Thuggish Ruggish Bone', it became a popular album and received positive reviews from music critics, earning praise for the group's melodic rapping style. The album title is a portmanteau of Cleveland's eastside neighborhood centering on East 99th Street and St. Clair Avenue where the group is based and the then-future year 1999.

E. 1999 Eternal became the group's best-selling album, with over six million copies sold in the United States and nearly twenty million worldwide. It topped the US Billboard 200 for two consecutive weeks. The album was nominated for the inaugural Grammy Award for Best Rap Album, ultimately losing to Naughty by Nature's Poverty's Paradise at the 1996 Grammy Awards.[1]

In 2015, the group toured in support of the 20th anniversary of the album, performing it in its entirety for the first time.

  • 2Track listing
  • 3Personnel
  • 4Chart history

Reception[edit]

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[2]
Chicago Tribune[3]
Entertainment WeeklyB−[4]
Los Angeles Times[5]
NME8/10[6]
Q[7]
Rolling Stone[8]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide[9]
The Source4.5/5[10]
The Village VoiceB[11]

Upon release, E. 1999 Eternal was met with critical acclaim. Cheo H. Coker of the Los Angeles Times wrote that the group 'has raised the stakes of the gangsta rap game, not only in terms of pure, gritty excess, but also in rhyme-style, cadence and delivery', concluding: 'This is the kind of album that starts out good and gets better with repeated listenings—as the dark, subliminal references clear up. Easily one of the most worthwhile rap purchases of the year.'[5]

Retrospectively, Jason Birchmeier of AllMusic described E. 1999 Eternal as 'an impressive debut full-length that dismisses any notion that the group was merely a one-hit wonder', adding that it 'maintains a consistent tone, one that's menacing and somber, produced entirely by DJ U-Neek, a Los Angeles-based producer who frames the songs with dark, smoked-out G-funk beats and synth melodies.'[2]The Source hailed E. 1999 Eternal as one of The Top 100 Rap Albums of 1990s.

In a second thought review in Stylus Magazine, the album was described as 'Lyrically speaking, Bone Thugs have much in common with countless mainstream rap acts. The themes running throughout E.1999 Eternal are familiar—drugs, violent crime and death make regular appearances. It's the manner in which the lyrics are framed and delivered that makes the group such a bizarre proposition. Bone Thugs had a melodic flow—frequently delivered in unison—that bordered on singing. They could rap together at a lightning fast pace, without losing their sweetness.' Stylus also praised producer DJ U-Neek for his production style on the album stating 'The album was entirely produced by DJ U-Neek (although he did collaborate on some tracks), endowing cohesiveness to the unique Bone Thugs sound. U-Neek was, like the vocal group members of Bone Thugs, unorthodox in the rap field. It wouldn't be far off to describe him as a songwriter as well as a producer. He was always keen to flesh out interesting sounds—usually based around rumbling piano chords, mellotron and synthesised strings. Yet, the focus was largely on song craft and melody—the album frequently strays into gloomy territory, but never loses its sense of tunefulness. The beats were not particularly striking—usually low-key and sluggish, but the album's strengths are not rhythm-related.'

Track listing[edit]

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1.'Da Introduction'
  • Tony Hester
U-Neek4:28
2.'East 1999'
  • U-Neek
  • Tony-C[a]
4:24
3.'Eternal'
  • U-Neek
  • Tony-C[a]
  • Kenny McCloud[a]
4:06
4.'Crept & We Came'
  • U-Neek
  • Tony-C[a]
5:06
5.'Down '71 (The Getaway)'U-Neek4:52
6.'Mr. Bill Collector'
  • Bone
  • U-Neek
  • Tony-C
5:04
7.'Budsmokers Only'
  • Bone
  • U-Neek
  • Tony-C
U-Neek3:34
8.'Crossroad'
  • U-Neek
  • Tony-C[a]
3:43
9.'Me Killa (Skit)'
  • U-Neek
  • McCloud[a]
0:58
10.'Land of Tha Heartless'
  • U-Neek
  • Bone[a]
3:08
11.'No Shorts, No Losses'
  • U-Neek
  • Bone[a]
4:54
12.'1st of Tha Month'U-Neek5:15
13.'Buddah Lovaz'
  • Bone
  • U-Neek
  • Tony-C
4:43
14.'Die, Die, Die'
  • Bone
  • U-Neek
U-Neek2:51
15.'Mr. Ouija 2 (Skit)'
  • U-Neek
  • Bone[a]
1:19
16.'Mo' Murda'
  • U-Neek
  • Tony-C[a]
5:47
17.'Shotz To Tha Double Glock (Tha Dogg Pound Diss) (feat. Poetic Hustla'z & The Graveyard Shift)'
  • U-Neek
  • McCloud[a]
4:44
Reissue bonus tracks
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
18.'Tha Crossroads (DJ U-Neek's Mo Thug Remix)'
  • U-Neek
  • Tony-C[a]
3:46
Notes
  • ^a signifies a co-producer

Samples[edit]

#TitleSamples
1.'Da Introduction''In The Rain' by The Dramatics
3.'Eternal''Character Bios Theme' from Eternal Champions by Joe Delia, Adrian Van Velsen, John Hart and Jeff Marsh
7.'Budsmokers Only''Reasons' by Earth, Wind & Fire
8.'Crossroad”'Bad Ending Theme' from Eternal Champions by Joe Delia, Adrian Van Velsen, John Hart and Jeff Marsh
9.'Me Killa (Skit)''I Will Follow Him' by Little Peggy March
12.'1st of Tha Month''I Just Wanna Be Your Girl' by Chapter 8
13.'Buddah Lovaz''Choosey Lover' by The Isley Brothers
14.'Die, Die, Die''Breakthrough' by Isaac Hayes
16.'Mo Murda''I'd Rather Be With You' by Bootsy's Rubber Band
18.'Tha Crossroads''Make Me Say It Again Girl Part 1 & 2' by The Isley Brothers

Personnel[edit]

  • Eric 'Eazy-E' Wright - Executive Producer, Album Concept
  • D.J. U-Neek - Producer, Recording
  • Layzie Bone - Producer
  • Anne Catalino - Engineer
  • Aaron Connor - Engineer and Recording
  • Don Cunningham - Design and Art Direction
  • Tony Cowan - Recording
  • Madeleine Smith - Sample Clearance

Appearances[edit]

  • Krayzie Bone appears on all tracks.
  • Layzie Bone and Bizzy Bone appear on 16 tracks.
  • Wish Bone appears on 12 tracks.
  • Flesh-n-Bone appears on 5 tracks.

Chart history[edit]

Album[edit]

Chart positions from Billboard magazine (North America)

YearChart positions
Billboard 200Top R&B/Hip Hop Albums
199511

Singles[edit]

YearSongChart positions
Billboard Hot 100Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & TracksHot Rap SinglesHot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales
19951st of tha Month1412413
East 199962398
1996Tha Crossroads11121

End of decade charts[edit]

Chart (1990–1999)Position
U.S. Billboard 200[12]54

See also[edit]

Download Bone Thugs N Harmony The Art Of War Zip

References[edit]

Download Bone Thugs N Harmony The Art Of War Zip Line

  1. ^Grammy Best Rap Albums Winners. About.com. Retrieved on 2010-08-17.
  2. ^ abBirchmeier, Jason. 'E 1999 Eternal – Bone Thugs-N-Harmony'. AllMusic. Retrieved February 14, 2012.
  3. ^Johnson, Martin (August 10, 1995). 'Bone Thugs-n-Harmony: E. 1999 Eternal (Ruthless)'. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved February 14, 2012.
  4. ^Browne, David (August 4, 1995). 'E. 1999 Eternal'. Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved February 14, 2012.
  5. ^ abCoker, Cheo H. (July 22, 1995). 'Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, 'E.1999 Eternal' Relativity'. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved February 14, 2012.
  6. ^'Bone Thugs-n-Harmony: E. 1999 Eternal'. NME: 50. August 19, 1995.
  7. ^'Bone Thugs-n-Harmony: E. 1999 Eternal'. Q (162): 116–17. March 2000.
  8. ^Fernando, S. H. Jr. (November 2, 1995). 'Bone Thugs-N-Harmony: E. 1999 Eternal'. Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on May 6, 2007. Retrieved June 25, 2012.Cite uses deprecated parameter deadurl= (help)
  9. ^Relic, Peter (2004). 'Bone Thugs-n-Harmony'. In Brackett, Nathan; Hoard, Christian (eds.). The New Rolling Stone Album Guide (4th ed.). Simon & Schuster. pp. 92–93. ISBN0-7432-0169-8.
  10. ^'Bone Thugs-n-Harmony: E. 1999 Eternal'. The Source (72): 98. September 1995.
  11. ^Christgau, Robert (November 28, 1995). 'Turkey Shoot'. The Village Voice. New York. Retrieved September 11, 2014.
  12. ^Geoff Mayfield (December 25, 1999). 1999 The Year in Music Totally '90s: Diary of a Decade - The listing of Top Pop Albums of the '90s & Hot 100 Singles of the '90s. Billboard. Retrieved October 15, 2010.Italic or bold markup not allowed in: publisher= (help)

External links[edit]

The Art Of War Movie

  • E 1999 Eternal at Discogs
  • 'Back to the Lab' series - E 1999 Eternal at RapReviews
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=E._1999_Eternal&oldid=906258634'