Tha Last Meal

| Snoop Dogg

Cabbagescale

86.7%
  • Reviews Counted:15

Listeners Score

0%liked it
  • Listeners Ratings: 0

Tha Last Meal

Tha Last Meal is the fifth studio album by American rapper Snoop Dogg. It was released on December 19, 2000. It was his third and final studio album released on No Limit Records and his first album on his newly founded label Doggystyle Records in the United States. The album was produced mostly by Master P and Dr. Drealong with Timbaland and Soopafly. The album included the singles "Snoop Dogg (What's My Name Pt. 2)", "Hennesey n Buddah" featuring Kokane, "Lay Low" featuring Nate Dogg, "Loosen' Control" and "Wrong Idea" featuring Bad Azz.-Wikipedia

Critic Reviews

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  • NME

    Make no mistake, this is a poor, poor album....  

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  • AV Club

    No artistic or lyrical growth, let alone maturity, but few artists coast on their free-flowing, larger-than-life charisma quite as enjoyably as he does. 

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  • Rap Reviews

    Snoop is having fun, and wants you to come along for the party. Let's ride!  

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  • All Music

    Increasingly old-school pose suits his gracefully aging self well. Despite his former affiliation with Death Row Records and his much-publicized murder trial, Snoop never seemed like much of a thug. 

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  • Pandora

    Following this misty-eyed finale, you’re left with the thankful sense that Snoop has finally taken control of his career.  

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  • The Boombox

    Too addictive to turn down. 

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  • Angelfire

    This album is your basic Snoop Dog album.  

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  • Laut

    The album is not really bad. 

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  • Define a Revolution

    The fresh sound of the West was once again in play from the opening of "Hennesey and Buddah", which is a smooth west coast track perfect to kick off this album.  

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  • Escobar

    It still showed that Snoop still had the chops to be a major player in the rap game. Vic  

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  • Nappy Afro

    Everything about the album takes me back to my high school days when I actually listened to Snoop. I think this is one of Snoop’s best albums. 

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  • Rap Analysis

    As original as Snoop’s flow is today, still sounding fresh today after 20 years. 

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  • Flamboyant for Lyfe

    There's great beats here too, banging G-funk joints. Snoop dropped some great albums.  

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  • Slacker

    Snoop's increasingly old-school pose suits his gracefully aging self well.  

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  • Hip Hop Isn't Dead

    You can pick up those two songs and leave the rest of this alone, and you won't feel like you missed out on much. 

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