The Crossroads Bone Thugs
- View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1996 CD release of Tha Crossroads on Discogs.
- “Tha Crossroads” is a remixed version of the E. 1999 Eternal track “Crossroad”.It debuted at #2 in the US, and then moved to the top spot the following week, the quickest move to #1 in the.
Bone Thugs-n-Harmony - The Crossroads Lyrics. Bone, Bone, Bone Bone, Bone, Bone Bone, Bone, Bone Now tell me, whatcha gonna do when there ain't nowhere to run When judgment comes for y. Popular Song Lyrics. Billboard Hot 100. Upcoming Lyrics. Recently Added.
. Length 3: 44, Tony C (original version) singles chronology ' (1995) ' Tha Crossroads' (1996) ' (1996) ' Tha Crossroads' is a song written and performed by group, taken from their album and released in 1996. The song is dedicated to the group's mentor, the late icon, and other family members. The song was the highest-debuting rap single when it debuted at number two on the. It is their biggest selling single, reaching number one on the Hot 100, and in 1997, the song won a Grammy for Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group. Contents. Background 'Crossroad' originally debuted in 1995 on the album.
It was dedicated to Bone's dead friend Wallace (Wally) Laird III, but after the death of they decided to remake it as 'Tha Crossroads'. The original song appears on the edited version of the album, though the European release has the original as track number 8 and the remix as track 18.
The song is performed by four of the group's members, (, and ). After receiving high praise for their song the group decided to make it their third single for their already released album,. The song was a smash hit worldwide and reached the top of the. It has been certified 2x platinum in the.
In 2008, 'Tha Crossroads' was ranked number 33 on VH1's 100 Greatest Songs of Hip Hop. Music video The music video was filmed on February 27–28, 1996. It opens with the female vocal group Tre' (Kimberly Cromartie, Rebecca Forsha and Maniko Williams) singing the traditional spiritual ' in a church funeral setting, followed by the members of Bone Thugs-n-Harmony singing the main song in several settings, such as a church and a mountain top. The main focus of the video is an imposing man with sunglasses and a trench coat, akin to a.
Bone are among the few who can see the man, and watch him as he gathers souls of various individuals who are marked for death, such as a young man who leaves his distraught mother behind (presumably have died after entering life as a gang member), Bone's friend Mike G, Wish Bone's uncle Charles, and a newborn baby (possibly to have died from a childbirth complication). The Reaper then leads the souls, with the baby in his arms, up a mountain where he reveals himself to be an angel, then takes the dead to. 'Tha Crossroads' was nominated for the at the in 1996, although it lost to Coolio's '.' Track listings Australian CD single. 'Tha Crossroads' (D.J. U-Neek's Mo Thug remix) – 3:50. 'Tha Crossroads' (D.J.
U-Neek's remix instrumental) – 3:48. 'Crossroad' (LP version – radio edit) – 3:33. '1st of tha Month' (The Kruder and Dorfmeister remix) – 6:15.
'Thuggish Ruggish Bone' – 4:42 Charts and sales. 'Offering'. 'Uproar' Released August 19, 2002 Format, Recorded 2002 Length 3: 10 (radio edit) Bryon McCane II, Anthony Henderson, Steven Howse, Charles Scruggs & Joe singles chronology ' Crossroads' (2002) ' (2002) ' Crossroads', a retitled and reworked version of 'Tha Crossroads', was released by British ten-piece hip-hop group as their first single in August 2002. Background The group's cover version of 'Crossroads' was recorded for inclusion on their first studio album,. The decision to record and release 'Crossroads' came about during the final stages of the album production: until June 2002, the song 'Standard Flow' was planned for release as the group's first single, with a promotional version of the 'Standard Flow' even made available on August 5. Despite being labelled as a cover version, only the chorus from the original version remains, with the verses replaced by new lyrics written by the band.
Despite being the only 'cover version' the group ever recorded, it became the band's only number one single, staying at the top of the for one week in August 2002. Two versions of the song exist: the main version, which features in the music video and on In the Beginning, and the full version, which contains two extra verses, which appears on the second physical release of the single. Music video The music video for 'Crossroads' directed by was premiered in July 2002. The video runs for a total length of three minutes and forty-eight seconds and shows the band performing the song on top of an unfinished flyover in the centre of Cape Town.
The video also shows scenes of an underpass where a number of homeless people are living, and individual shots of each band member. The video was filmed with the phantom effect, which provides a 'shadow' type movement for each member of the band. Track listing. Digital single. 'Crossroads' (radio edit) – 3:10. 'Uproar' – 3:25.
UK CD #1. 'Crossroads' (radio edit) – 3:10. 'Uproar' – 3:25.
'Crossroads' (CD-ROM video) – 3:45. UK CD #2. 'Crossroads' (full version) – 3:50. 'Offering' – 3:20. 'Crossroads' (T.N.T Remix) – 3:50.
Cassette. 'Crossroads' (radio edit) – 3:10. 'Crossroads' (full version) – 3:50 Chart positions Chart (2002) Peak position 82 13 1 See also. References. CUDA, HEIDI SIEGMUND (1996-06-15). Los Angeles Times.
Retrieved 2015-10-20. Retrieved 2015-10-20. ' (in German).
' (in Dutch). ' (in French). ' (in French).
' (in German). PhonoNet GmbH. ' (in Dutch). THE OFFICIAL NZ MUSIC CHART.
Retrieved 23 November 2016. (in German). Retrieved August 7, 2015. Retrieved 2010-08-27. Geoff Mayfield (December 25, 1999). Retrieved October 15, 2010.
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The Crossroads Bone Thugs-n-harmony Hd
^ Roberts, David (2006). London: Guinness World Records Limited. Retrieved 2014-04-02. External links.
The Crossroads Bone Thugs N Harmony Mp3 Download
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EDITORS’ NOTES Bone Thugs-n-Harmony’s blazing vocal cadences whizz throughout their debut like bullets from a machine gun. The Cleveland group combines those rattled-out syllables with the potent melodicism that would become their trademark. Having come up under the tutelage of L.A.
Pioneer Eazy-E, they pull from the darkest corners of G-funk, lacing their sound with mournful piano and sour whistles. The solemn “Tha Crossroads” is a doleful ode to Eazy, while “East 1999” offers a grimy paragon of hard-boiled gangsterism you can’t turn away from. EDITORS’ NOTES Bone Thugs-n-Harmony’s blazing vocal cadences whizz throughout their debut like bullets from a machine gun. The Cleveland group combines those rattled-out syllables with the potent melodicism that would become their trademark. Having come up under the tutelage of L.A. Pioneer Eazy-E, they pull from the darkest corners of G-funk, lacing their sound with mournful piano and sour whistles. The solemn “Tha Crossroads” is a doleful ode to Eazy, while “East 1999” offers a grimy paragon of hard-boiled gangsterism you can’t turn away from.