Product Details
Blue Carpet Treatment

Blue Carpet Treatment
Snoop Dogg

List Price: CDN$ 16.99
Price: CDN$ 11.81 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $39. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca

24 new or used available from CDN$ 1.47

Average customer review:
(2 )

Track Listing

  1. Intrology Album Version (Explicit)
  2. Think About It Album Version (Explicit)
  3. Crazy Album Version (Explicit)
  4. Vato Album Version (Explicit)
  5. That's That Shit Album Version (Explicit)
  6. Candy (Drippin' Like Water) Final Album Version (Explicit)
  7. Get A Light Album Version (Explicit)
  8. Gangbangin' 101 Album Version (Explicit)
  9. Boss' Life Album Version (Explicit)
  10. LAX Album Version (Explicit)
  11. 10 Lil' Crips Album Version (Explicit)
  12. Round Here Album Version (Explicit)
  13. A Bitch I Knew Album Version (Explicit)
  14. Like This Album Version (Explicit)
  15. Which One Of You Album Version (Explicit)
  16. I Wanna Fuck You Album Version (Explicit)
  17. Psst! Album Version (Explicit)
  18. Beat Up On Yo Pads Album Version (Explicit)
  19. Don't Stop Album Version (Explicit)
  20. Imagine Album Version (Explicit)
  21. Conversations Album Version (Explicit)

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #29545 in Music
  • Released on: 2006-11-21
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Explicit Lyrics
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: .22 pounds

Editorial Reviews

From Amazon.com
Tha Blue Carpet Treatment finds Snoop employing his usual impressive lineup of collaborators and strutting his way through a by-now standard litany of libidinous, gang-bangin' boasts. But when your record is packed with this much veteran savvy and smooth flavor, the pride comes naturally. Snoop has been g-funky as hell for a long while, but "Crazy," with its hypnotic keyboard loop and silky flow, is impressive even for him. It's a trickle of light to counter the equally accomplished but darker "Vato," a fever-dream street duet with Cypress Hill's B Real. Traces of Doggystyle-era gangsta show up as well; the laconic flow of "Candy (Drippin' Like Water)" for instance, featuring E-40 and MC Eiht, is as instantly appealing as anything on that seminal debut. It must be said that whatever Snoop Dogg releases at this point in his career competes with his overwhelming celebrity and cartoonish, pimp-maestro image, and that makes it hard to take him seriously. But here, even a too-obvious, potentially disastrous song like "I Wanna F*** You" manages not to be ridiculous. If that's not the mark of a true star, I don't know what is. --Matthew Cooke