1. Definition of a West Coast G' (Intro)
2. Why We Thugs
3. Smoke Some Weed
4. Dimes & Nicks (A Call from Mike Epps)
5. Child Support
6. 2 Decades Ago - (take Insert)
7. Doin' What It 'Pose 2Do
8. Laugh Now, Cry Later
9. Stop Snitchin'
10. Go to Church
11. Nigga Trapp, The
12. History of Violence, A (Insert) - (take Insert)
13. Growin' Up
14. Click, Clack - Get Back!
15. Game Lord, The
16. Chrome & Paint
17. Steal the Show
18. You Gotta Lotta That
19. Spittin' Pollaseeds
20. Holla @ Cha' Boy
Reviews:
''Laugh Now, Cry Later'' is the seventh studio album by rapper Ice Cube, released on June 6, 2006. It is Ice Cube's first album to be released on his independently owned record label Lench Mob Records and his first studio album in six years. After spending the previous six years mainly doing movie projects, it could be considered a comeback album. The album debuted in the top five selling 144,000 copies in the first week. - Wikipedia
He was not always an even-tempered neighborhood barber, that O'Shea Jackson. Plenty of rappers have gone on to successful film careers. (Many more than rockers, it seems, a fact that has yet to be explained.) But few have overhauled their images so thoroughly in the process as Ice Cube, unless you count Snoop-which you shouldn't, because nobody was ever really afraid of him, and besides, who actually saw
Soul Plane or
Bones?
Friday and
Barbershop were blockbusters, though, and Cube was as notorious as gangstas came back around the time of his debut in
Boyz n the Hood. Apparently, though, he feels hobbled by the down-to-earth family man image he's cultivated onscreen, because the MC has decided it's time to get all "street" on his first album in a half dozen years,
Laugh Now, Cry Later, with help from today's biggest producers-including Scott Storch, Swizz Beatz and Lil Jon.