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1998 studio album by Crucial Conflict
Good Side Bad Side Released November 3rd, 1998 Studio The Barn (Chicago) CRC (Chicago)Neighborhood Watch (Chicago) Genre Label Producer
Good Side Bad Side is the second album by the Chicago hip hop group Crucial Conflict .[ 3] [ 4] It was released on November 3, 1998, through Pallas Records, Raw Dope Productions and Universal Records . Recording sessions took place at the Barn, Chicago Recording Company and Neighbourhood Watch Studios in Chicago. It features a couple of diss tracks towards Bone Thugs-N-Harmony , and guest appearances from Tear Da Club Up Thugs , Do Or Die and R. Kelly .
The album peaked at number 38 on the Billboard 200 albums chart and at number 10 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart in the United States.
The Chicago Tribune thought that "producer-rapper Wild Style's mesmerizing musical compositions may be the group's strongest asset ... Dubbed the 'Rodeo' style, the work of the Windy City beatsmith contains insistent keyboard, twangy guitar and dynamic drum patterns that explode from the speakers."[ 5] The Chicago Reader wrote that "the relentlessly hysterical, nasal speed-rapping turns the 75-minute CD into a suffocating sonic beatdown."[ 6]
Title 1. "Intro" 2:00 2. "The Bidness" 4:09 3. "Scummy" 4:28 4. "Roll Somethin" 4:18 5. "2 Bogus" (featuring Tear Da Club Up Thugs ) 4:18 6. "Let It Go" 3:40 7. "Like This" 4:23 8. "Young Guns" 4:53 9. "Universal Love" 4:11 10. "Faceless Ones" 3:58 11. "Swing It over Here" 4:17 12. "Airplane" (featuring Do Or Die ) 4:51 13. "Pump It Up" 3:34 14. "Back Against the Wall (Bone Thugs Diss)" 5:20 15. "Come On" 3:40 16. "I'm Bout to Explode" 5:02 17. "Ghetto Queen" (featuring R. Kelly ) 4:19 18. "Raw Dope Anthem" 4:24
Crucial Conflict
Corey "Coldhard" Johnson – main artist, vocals
Wondosas "Kilo" Martin – main artist, vocals
Marrico "Never" King – main artist, vocals
Ralph "Wildstyle" Leverston – main artist, producer (tracks: 1-16, 18) , mixing (tracks: 1-12, 14-18) , engineering (tracks: 6, 12) , assistant engineering (track 14) , mastering (tracks: 1-4, 6–11, 13, 15-18)
Additional vocalists
Technical
QBall – scratches (track 4) , mixing (tracks: 1, 2, 4, 6–10, 14–16, 18) , assistant engineering (track 6)
Frankie – guitar (track 11)
Chris Steinmetz – engineering (tracks: 1, 7–9, 11, 15-18)
Tom Carlyle – engineering (tracks: 2, 4, 10)
Jeff Lang – engineering (tracks: 3, 5, 12-14)
Fred Hahn – assistant engineering (tracks: 1, 2, 4, 7, 8, 10, 15-18)
Bill Douglass – assistant engineering (tracks: 5, 12-14)
Jason B. – assistant engineering (tracks: 9, 11)
Matt Judah – assistant engineering (tracks: 17, 18)
Blake C – assistant engineering (track 9)
Dennis Ferrante – mastering (tracks: 1-4, 6–11, 13, 15-18)
Sean Sutton – mastering (tracks: 5, 12, 14)
Fred Brathwaite – executive producer, art direction
Roy "Black Prince" Cormier – executive producer
Torino "Neno Blade" Norris – executive producer
Shorty Capone – executive producer
Eric Russ – art direction
Daniel Hastings – photography
^ Gallucci, Michael. "Good Side, Bad Side - Crucial Conflict | Songs, Reviews, Credits" . AllMusic . Retrieved November 5, 2018 .
^ Alvarez, Gabriel (December 1998). "Record Report: Crucial Conflict – Good Side, Bad Side". The Source . No. 111. New York. pp. 206, 208.
^ "Crucial Conflict Biography, Songs, & Albums" . AllMusic .
^ "Crucial Conflict Rally Around Windy City For New Album" . MTV News . Archived from the original on November 11, 2016.
^ Baker, Soren. "Crucial Conflict Good Side Bad Side (Pallas/Universal)" . chicagotribune.com .
^ Margasak, Peter (December 17, 1998). "Jay-Z/ Big Punisher/ Noreaga/ Crucial Conflict" . Chicago Reader .
^ "Crucial Conflict Chart History (Billboard 200)" . Billboard . Retrieved November 5, 2018.
^ "Crucial Conflict Chart History (Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums)" . Billboard . Retrieved November 5, 2018.
Corey "Coldhard" Johnson
Wondosas "Kilo" Martin
Ralph "Wildstyle" Leverston
Marrico "Never" King
Studio albums Singles Related articles