Back To Artist
Too Short Presents: : Nationwide 2: Ghetto Pass
Log in to add to your wishlist
Classic Southern and West Coast Rap Compilation by rapper, Too Short.
Genre: Hip-Hop/Rap: Southern Style
Release Date: 2000
Nationwide 2: Ghetto Pass Record Label: Short- SoSouth
  • Buy CD - $9.99
SPECIAL: 50% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
I'll Take Your Hoe 3:21 Album Only
Cigarette 5:09 Album Only
Diamonds 4:57 Album Only
Can't Stop 4:07 Album Only
Shoulda Had Your Thugs 4:19 Album Only
Ride & Roll 5:22 Album Only
You Nasty 3:07 Album Only
Let My Nuts Go 3:44 Album Only
Just One 4:32 Album Only
Shake Dem Haters 3:33 Album Only
Gimme Mine 4:37 Album Only
Where You At? (Remix) 4:45 Album Only
Traffic 3:46 Album Only
That's Where I'm From 3:52 Album Only
Keep Paging Me 4:10 Album Only
Head 4:20 Album Only
Strike 3 4:36 Album Only
preview all songs

Album Notes

Born in Los Angeles, but an Oakland resident by the age of 14, Too Short was the first West Coast rap star, recording three albums on his own before he made his major-label debut with 1988's gold album Born to Mack; his next four all went platinum. Anticipating much of the later gangsta phenomenon, he restricted his lyrical themes to tales of sexual prowess and physical violence, with the occasional social message track to mix things up. After the release of Gettin' It (Album Number Ten) in 1996, Too Short decided to retire, his status assured as one of the most successful solo rappers of the 1980s and early '90s, although that decision would prove short-lived.

Born Todd Shaw on April 28, 1966, Too Short grew up in L.A.'s South Central; soon after his family moved to Oakland in the early '80s, he began selling tapes out of the back of his car. Signed to the local label 75 Girls, he released his first proper album in 1983, Don't Stop Rappin'. Three albums followed in the next two years, after which Too Short formed his own Dangerous Music label with friend Freddy B. He recorded Born to Mack in 1986, and sold more than 50,000 copies just by riding around the region. New York's Jive Records picked up on the buzz from across the country, and provided a national deal for the album one year later. With virtually no radio airplay, Born to Mack went gold and its follow-up, Life Is...Too Short, achieved platinum sales by 1989.

The immense success of Too Short during 1988-1989 made him much more viable for radio airplay, and "The Ghetto" -- from 1990's Short Dog's in the House -- made number 12 on the R&B charts, even enjoying a brief stay just outside the pop Top 40. He continued his hit track record with 1992's Shorty the Pimp and 1993's Get in Where You Fit In, both of which went platinum. By the time of 1995's Cocktails, however, Too Short began to be drowned out by a glut of similar-sounding West Coasters, and though Gettin' It (Album Number Ten) became his fifth platinum album, by late 1996 he decided to retire. Just three years later, however, he returned with the aptly titled Can't Stay Away, which debuted in the Top Ten and went gold. A series of follow-ups surfaced subsequently.

Read more...

REVIEWS

ghetto pass
author: jr
this cd gets donw too short did a bomb ass job
Read more...
Jammin!
author: Vo
yezz indeed!
Read more...