#rewindreview: Snoop Dogg ‘Missionary’ 2024
The long awaited full album collaboration of Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre, finally arrives thirty-one years later, in a year when HOP music’s veterans retained dominance. After year’s of speculation and request, the two finally locked in to a studio and provided ‘Missionary’ which is an off color sequel to Snoop Dogg’s debut album ‘Doggystyle.’ Dr. Dre enlist a new crop of production collaborators as well as a few old ones to give this album a sound that does not fall slave to current day standards while not getting lost in nostalgia. Snoop Dogg doesn’t miss a beat rhyming and sounds like he never stopped in his busy celebrity life to neglect the thing that got him that same life. Collaborations may seem like many but only a few share rapping duties on this album that include 50 Cent, Method Man, Eminem and Dr. Dre. Other collaborations are vocalist such as BJ The Chicago Kid, Cocoa Sarai and K.A.A.N. Where ‘Missionary’ gets confusing to the general public is it’s execution from two of not only Hip-Hop but the entertainment industries biggest names. There is an air of “playing it safe” on this album or better still the content and sound pertaining to the life of two megastars. This album is not dark and more upbeat with moments that do not alienate the “fair-weather” HOP music listener or the listener that only pays attention when names like “Snoop,” Eminem or 50 Cent is mentioned. This I believe is where the album gets it’s negative criticism. There will always be a level of expectation for the collaboration of “Snoop & Dre” so when the album enters territory that sounds geared toward a crowd that doesn’t care about Hip-Hop culture, it creates “eye-rolling” moments for actual HOP fans. This doesn’t happen often on ‘Missionary’ in my opinion and I think is unfair to the overall album. After the initial few tracks that establish the magic of Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre’s return, ‘Missionary’ then ventures to moments with Tom Petty, Jelly Roll and Sting, with ‘Thank You’ in between that, which isn’t a bad song but suffers from basic hook. Although I’m not a fan, 50 Cent’s verse sounds like a garbled mess as he attempts to execute a double-time rhyme delivery while I was impressed that Eminem seemed to not out rap a song for a change. In all ‘Missionary’ is not a bad album but suffers from the success of previous records from Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre that came before it. Personally I think that it still continues the argument that HOP music is not just a “young man’s sport,” which ironically is part of the evolution of the music to show just that. What did you think of the album? Singles include: ‘Gorgeous,’ ‘Outta Da Blue’ & ‘Fire’ Listen to QUANTUM LEAP RADIO every Saturday from 4-6p.m. CST & Thursday from 1-3a.m. CST on 90.1 FM KPFT Houston in HD2 Worldwide @kpft.org/listen (under “kpft in HD2”) Catch past episodes by searching and following @https://linktr.ee/QLEAPRADIO