Grew up with this music its not the same today, I played this CD so much with DMX, bubba Sparx, Paul Wall, G funk, 2 pac, man the late 80's 90's music was the best.
Lex NAILED IT! 💯 This was part of the G-Funk Era. Nate Dogg (RIP) was the KING of hooks back in the day. Try "Nobody Does It Better" next for more of that laid back chill vibe. Appreciate it!
I've probably told this story before here on a Dre video. I met Warren G's uncle, "Ron G", at the bar at Stinking Rose restaurant in Beverly Hills. I think it was Spring Break '99. I was having a smoke on the bar patio chatting with some girl who was there to meet someone about her singing career. Dude in a Def Jam letter jacket rolled up and introduced himself as Ron G. We chatted for like an hour having a few drinks. My friend and I were about to say bye and leave, and Ron says, "nah, stick around, Dr Dre's gonna be here in about 30 mins, I'll introduce you". Sure enough, he walks in. He looked a smaller and shorter in person than he did in his videos. I was drunk AF at this point. Ron introduces me to him and I said: "Dr Dre?... Did you lose like 50 pounds or somethin'?". Dr Dre just said, "yeah I been runnin' a little bit". My roommate was terrified, "we gotta leave dude you just told Dr Dre he was fat! We're gonna get beat up". We went outside to get a taxi, Dre comes out while we're waiting, hands me a flyer for his Chronic 2001 album. "Buy my new album comin out later this year". That was it.
Gotta love that Young Guns quote for the intro! I remember cruising around to this song. Stereo blaring. Hard bass notes. Good stuff. Definitely brings up some nostalgia.
The intro is from the 80s Western, Young Guns So, what you like Lex is the g-funk style in particular. Dre, Snoop, Warren G, Nate Dogg, etc. It was like 92-93 out of Compton, L.A. The laid back style/clothes, the hard funk beats (usually from Dre). It was a very specific scene, and it was huge, but not reflective of old school hip hop in general.
The G Funk sound was more from Warren then Dre. Smooth booming bass lines over keyboards and synths. Dre was more heavily into sampling 70-80s funk and RnB. Also G Funk is just a play on P Funk from Parliament / George Clinton etc.
@@dre3k78 Dre invented G funk. He was doing it for years before Warren G (his little brother) put this out. And P-Funk WAS a funk group from the 60s and 70s.
@@react2reactions246 Did you not read what i wrote? The name G Funk is just a play of words from P Funk...they took it from Parliament and made it something else. Dre was all about sampling even back in NWA. Warren G was doing his own thing and was the real originator of the G Funk sound.
In this episode of Brad & Lex, Simultaneous "sways" ensue in an instant followed by Lex's "frontal bop" before adding her brief interpretation which is finely tuned by her couch companion before returning to the groove with body movements equipped with flashing pearly whites as Brad displays an above average "side to side sway".
The term "regulate" was from the 1990's movie " the Young Guns" which was a Western about Bill The Kid and his band of outlaws. The movie starred Emilio Estevez and Keifer Sutherland.
Yall have done a reaction to Michael McDonald "I Keep Forgetting (Every Time You're Near" A solid soul/funk rock song on your soft rock stream months ago. Formerly of the Doobie Brothers. Yes, this was a hit back in the '90s! I was in high school lol. Old school hip-hop was pretty good for the most part, especially compared to most of the modern mainstream hip-hop. Lot of older rap music had stories, some serious. Some humorous, fun. This was g-funk rap, popular on the west coast. California mostly. Funky beats, guitar and bass lines. Some had the synthesizers as well. Also, back then, most rappers used their natural voices, not so much of the auto-tune. Lot of older rap music from the '80s, '90s, and early '00s sampled older music like funk rock, funk, disco, rock, new , blues, reggae/ska, wave/post-punk, punk, country, metal, etc. Different genres and fusions. Which is why it sounded nice and catchy, too. Other great videos from Warren G. "This DJ", "Do You See" Groups like them would be Coolio, Snoop Dogg, Paper Boy, The Dogg Pound,/Nate Dawg, etc
Casey Siemaszko had a good character role run there. Young Guns 1, Back To The Future, Stand By Me, Of Mice And Men. His lead role in Three O'Clock High didn't break him into leading man status, but I still watch it when it comes on the telly. His sister was the younger daughter in the movie Tucker (re: the Tucker Tornado car). She was cute.
The dialog clip at the beginning “...gotta earn you’re keep...” is from the movie “Young Guns.” It’s a GREAT 80’s movie with an awesome cast! Check it out.
This is the classic 90's "G-Funk" sound. Real gangstas don't need to rush or yell, they just tell it how it is. edit: Yes, this did use a sample from Michael McDonald's "Keep Forgetting"
This is my favorite Warren G song. This beat and lyrics are smoother than light butter. Thank you, Michael Mcdonald! 90's rap is far better than today's mumble rap.
My brother made a video documentary in high school in 2001 about Warren G Harding and it featured this song. Something about Warrens neighbor caught him stealing corn from his cornfield so he had to regulate, then this song began with a ridiculous chase, including my brother and my cousin chasing each other through the grocery store on the motorized carts meant for the handicapped.
The beat and music actually came from a really nice song. Michael Macdonald. "I keep forgetting " old school, also love the movie that this song came out for. We all know that movie.
Nobody could sing the Hook and chorus like Nate Dogg. His verse on 213 - My Dirty Ho were extremely good. 213 were Snoop Dogg, Warren G and Nate Dogg. He mentions 213 on Regulate. He also did some great solo work. Check out Another Short Story and Music & Me. RIP Warren G did Prince Igor with Norwegian singer Sissel Kyrkjebø. Great rap and her very hypnotic voice. It's called The Rapsody feat. Warren G & Sissel
90’s hip hop was just on another level. Lex had it right, the rhymes/bars told stories back then, and just flowed. On a different note- could y’all do some Outcast? Wu-Tang? Cheers-
Hey guys what's up! Greetings from South Florida! This is one of them songs where you roll down the windows, turn up the stereo, and just lean back. You guys rock! God bless you! Peace!
I’m a Metal head but I also like old school hip hop. Anything up to about 1991. Ice T , Mantronix, Schoolly D, Grandmaster Flash, Public Enemy, Boogie Down Productions, T La Rock ect. LL Cool J’s - “Can’t live without my Radio” was what hooked me at the time.
Still waiting for you guys to do an 80s rap and hip hop stream. You guys need to discover some EPMD, Eric B and Rakim, Digital Underground, Slick Rick, Boogie Down Productions, etc.
Are we expected to believe this is the first time these two have heard this joint? It's the pinnacle of the genre and an all time musical classic FFS!!!
i loved her country analogy. cause country and hip hop at their core are the same thing. just story telling. with different beats and instruments. thats why collabs like Nelly and Tim McGraw or jason alden "dirt road anthem" sound so good. and off course i m ean real country and real hip hop
90's Hip Hop and Rap was good stuff man. Hit it's peak back then with soooo many great songs just seemed like everyone was poppin hits. Ain't like that these days. Also, this song was sampled from a 70's song by Michael McDonald "I keep forgettin".
The "regulators" thing was from a movie called "Young Guns". It's a story about Billy the Kid during the Lincoln County War. BTK took a job as a regulator on Tunstall's property. They were basically private ranch security. When there was trouble the foreman would shout "REGULATORS MOUNT UP" (it was pretty bad ass). Which is why they sampled it for this song.
I remember me and my sister jammin' to this all the time on our cassette tape of this song. We had the cassette tape of this record. Seriously, I'm that old. Cassette tape and you had to take a pencil and untwist, untangle the tape to fix the tape.
This was my introduction into rap. Warren G regulators CD was so good. I was like 9 or 10 listening to this in my room lol back in the early 90s. I was a skinny white ginger and couldn't relate to the lyrics, but I knew I loved the beats and hooks. Listening to rap that early, helped me expand my bass techniques later in life when I started learning to play bass in a band probably 5 years later. I think If it wasn't for this song in particular, I wouldn't have listened to older rap which brought funk into my life. Then brought the likes of Wooten and Bootsy. Which was the catalyst for actually learning bass. This song is weirdly nostalgic for me lol. Loved the reaction!
If you walk into a packed bar and yell "REGULATORS!!", and no one yells "Mount Up!", just leave, you don't need that kind of negativity in your life.
Big facts💯👊
FACTS ON FACTS 😂
MOUNT UP
🤣🤣 I have never tried that, sounds epic, probably a bit late in the day though now. ah well good times.
@@peterwalsh2470 ye..
Hip hop was so fucking good in the 90s.
big facts
90's era music. Is the best era of music. Imo.
REGULATORS! MOUNT UP...
Oldshool Style,
she really had fun!
İt is true,
it was way cooler back then!
Michael McDonald “I Keep Forgetting” is the background sample. Totally forgot about this song. It’s got a nice summer vibe to it.
Just as I was wreaking my head on the hook bass, thanks man
@@Jamster3116 I had to look it up because it was bugging me too.
Which they covered 3 months ago.
ruclips.net/video/U8DtwZ-ZSKY/видео.html
Just checked - they've already reacted to I Keep Forgetting
I see what you did there XD
Shes reall prettyyy
Grew up with this music its not the same today, I played this CD so much with DMX, bubba Sparx, Paul Wall, G funk, 2 pac, man the late 80's 90's music was the best.
I've this song in 9th grade lmao. I'm old. Turned 46 in april...
I can't tell you how many times I pulled up to a high school party back in the late 90's blaring this one!! If you know... You know!👍
Sir! Creepin’ slow to perfectly time the “at the East-syyyyyiiiiidee moteee-ea-ea-eaaaaall!”
I love Nate Dogg!! That brothers smooth!
Now listen Michael McDonald."I keep forgettin , " you will see the connection
The love the remix of the two songs together!!
doobernow is really is great
They previously did the Michael McDonald song, I’m surprised they didn’t recognize the beat.
@@bhart62 IIRC Brad did recognize the beat when they did Michael's.
Lex NAILED IT! 💯 This was part of the G-Funk Era. Nate Dogg (RIP) was the KING of hooks back in the day. Try "Nobody Does It Better" next for more of that laid back chill vibe. Appreciate it!
50 cent came pretty close to being the hook master in the 2000s. RIP nate
FACTS. NOBODY DOES IT BETTER 🥹🥹
that shit goes hard
I have not heard this song in years
I miss this era of hiphop
All these years later I still know every single word!
Warren G was my first concert in the USA- Salt Lake City in 1993. I was in 7th grade. Awesome memories.
I've probably told this story before here on a Dre video. I met Warren G's uncle, "Ron G", at the bar at Stinking Rose restaurant in Beverly Hills. I think it was Spring Break '99. I was having a smoke on the bar patio chatting with some girl who was there to meet someone about her singing career. Dude in a Def Jam letter jacket rolled up and introduced himself as Ron G. We chatted for like an hour having a few drinks. My friend and I were about to say bye and leave, and Ron says, "nah, stick around, Dr Dre's gonna be here in about 30 mins, I'll introduce you". Sure enough, he walks in. He looked a smaller and shorter in person than he did in his videos. I was drunk AF at this point. Ron introduces me to him and I said: "Dr Dre?... Did you lose like 50 pounds or somethin'?". Dr Dre just said, "yeah I been runnin' a little bit". My roommate was terrified, "we gotta leave dude you just told Dr Dre he was fat! We're gonna get beat up". We went outside to get a taxi, Dre comes out while we're waiting, hands me a flyer for his Chronic 2001 album. "Buy my new album comin out later this year". That was it.
Nice
Nice
Why would he be angry at that? You didn't call him fat you called him in-shape!
Michael McDonald - I Keep Forgettin' (Every Time You're Near) is the sample to this classic Hip-Hop song.
😎👌
Sampled = Stolen, just saying! No musicianship involved in most Rap.
I grew up on rock music, but I’ve always been a fan of this song. Just my opinion I think it’s the best R&B/rap song out.
The beginning of the song talking about being regulators is from the movie Young Guns. Awesome movies.
Gotta love that Young Guns quote for the intro!
I remember cruising around to this song. Stereo blaring. Hard bass notes. Good stuff. Definitely brings up some nostalgia.
Yeah, I don't think everyone knows the clip or that the song is a nod to the old Wild West, Billy the Kid and the Lincoln County Regulators
R.I.P. Nathaniel Dwayne Hale (August 19, 1969 - March 15, 2011)
I was a senior in high school when this song was on the radio and the video was on MTV. Talk about old school flavor.
For me, this song IS junior high, going for a smooth stroll around the skating rink 😂
Says a lot that I'm not a rap fan and I still like this song. This is what rap should be.
Need more old school rap on this channel. '80s, '90s, some '00s. Much better than most newer hip hop.
The beat was sampled from the Michael McDonald song I Keep Forgetting.
The intro is from the 80s Western, Young Guns
So, what you like Lex is the g-funk style in particular. Dre, Snoop, Warren G, Nate Dogg, etc. It was like 92-93 out of Compton, L.A. The laid back style/clothes, the hard funk beats (usually from Dre). It was a very specific scene, and it was huge, but not reflective of old school hip hop in general.
John Randle from Minnesota Vikings also used it in games
The G Funk sound was more from Warren then Dre. Smooth booming bass lines over keyboards and synths. Dre was more heavily into sampling 70-80s funk and RnB. Also G Funk is just a play on P Funk from Parliament / George Clinton etc.
@@dre3k78 Dre invented G funk. He was doing it for years before Warren G (his little brother) put this out. And P-Funk WAS a funk group from the 60s and 70s.
@@react2reactions246 Did you not read what i wrote? The name G Funk is just a play of words from P Funk...they took it from Parliament and made it something else. Dre was all about sampling even back in NWA. Warren G was doing his own thing and was the real originator of the G Funk sound.
@@react2reactions246 And P Funk wasnt a group. Its just a term used by Parliament Funkadelic to describe their sound. Same as G Funk later on.
In this episode of Brad & Lex, Simultaneous "sways" ensue in an instant followed by Lex's "frontal bop" before adding her brief interpretation which is finely tuned by her couch companion before returning to the groove with body movements equipped with flashing pearly whites as Brad displays an above average "side to side sway".
This is the comment I look for immediately following the reaction.
True!
This song is the definition of smooth
Old school gotta love it
The term "regulate" was from the 1990's movie " the Young Guns" which was a Western about Bill The Kid and his band of outlaws. The movie starred Emilio Estevez and Keifer Sutherland.
Hard to believe that song is about 30 years old!
Yall have done a reaction to Michael McDonald "I Keep Forgetting (Every Time You're Near" A solid soul/funk rock song on your soft rock stream months ago. Formerly of the Doobie Brothers.
Yes, this was a hit back in the '90s! I was in high school lol. Old school hip-hop was pretty good for the most part, especially compared to most of the modern mainstream hip-hop.
Lot of older rap music had stories, some serious. Some humorous, fun. This was g-funk rap, popular on the west coast. California mostly. Funky beats, guitar and bass lines.
Some had the synthesizers as well. Also, back then, most rappers used their natural voices, not so much of the auto-tune. Lot of older rap music from the '80s, '90s, and early '00s sampled older music like funk rock, funk, disco, rock, new , blues, reggae/ska, wave/post-punk, punk, country, metal, etc. Different genres and fusions. Which is why it sounded nice and catchy, too.
Other great videos from Warren G. "This DJ", "Do You See" Groups like them would be Coolio, Snoop Dogg, Paper Boy, The Dogg Pound,/Nate Dawg, etc
Words at beginning from 1988's "Young Guns" (movie). Part 1.
Casey Siemaszko had a good character role run there. Young Guns 1, Back To The Future, Stand By Me, Of Mice And Men. His lead role in Three O'Clock High didn't break him into leading man status, but I still watch it when it comes on the telly. His sister was the younger daughter in the movie Tucker (re: the Tucker Tornado car). She was cute.
Michael McDonald......"I Keep Forgetting"....... that's your original.... this is yet another sample of that tune.
That beginning is from a movie called young guns. The music is from Michael McDonald’s I keep forgetting. You ought check it out.
The dialog clip at the beginning “...gotta earn you’re keep...” is from the movie “Young Guns.” It’s a GREAT 80’s movie with an awesome cast! Check it out.
This is the classic 90's "G-Funk" sound. Real gangstas don't need to rush or yell, they just tell it how it is.
edit: Yes, this did use a sample from Michael McDonald's "Keep Forgetting"
REGULATORSSSSSSSS
This is my favorite Warren G song. This beat and lyrics are smoother than light butter. Thank you, Michael Mcdonald! 90's rap is far better than today's mumble rap.
First time hearing Warren G?! How the cuss is that possible? This cat is a legend in our time.
Better late than never tho!😂
My first ever album i got from my cousin. I was 6. I knew every word of every track. Classic for sure.
G-Funk is my favorite sub-genre of rap. lol So smooooth.
My brother made a video documentary in high school in 2001 about Warren G Harding and it featured this song. Something about Warrens neighbor caught him stealing corn from his cornfield so he had to regulate, then this song began with a ridiculous chase, including my brother and my cousin chasing each other through the grocery store on the motorized carts meant for the handicapped.
The beat and music actually came from a really nice song. Michael Macdonald. "I keep forgetting " old school, also love the movie that this song came out for.
We all know that movie.
90's Hip Hop sh**s all over mumble rap, most new music honestly.
Nobody could sing the Hook and chorus like Nate Dogg. His verse on 213 - My Dirty Ho were extremely good. 213 were Snoop Dogg, Warren G and Nate Dogg. He mentions 213 on Regulate. He also did some great solo work. Check out Another Short Story and Music & Me. RIP
Warren G did Prince Igor with Norwegian singer Sissel Kyrkjebø. Great rap and her very hypnotic voice. It's called The Rapsody feat. Warren G & Sissel
Nate Dogg was also great in Head of State.
His step down on "next stop is the eastside motel" is awesome, but is kind of dulled by the cringe of the lyric. Pure voice though.
@@dougman23 What's wrong w/ the eastside motel & making it the next stop w/ those dames who are sexy as hell?
Nate Dogg, the king of hooks!
213 is an area code
This is my jam right here! Saw Snoop and Warren G in concert a cpl years ago and when the intro started, the whole arena went crazy! It was amazing!
G-funk is all time the shit.
Normally chilling for the 90's/00's rock but holy hell does this take me back to the radio station days.
I bough this album & Snoop Dogs Doggystyle at the same time around 94/95. Played them to death. Classics.
90’s hip hop was just on another level. Lex had it right, the rhymes/bars told stories back then, and just flowed.
On a different note- could y’all do some Outcast? Wu-Tang? Cheers-
Agree. These are a couple of my favorites. Anything from the 36 Chambers album is dope. Anything from the first three OutKast albums is 🔥 too.
@@tequila_mockingbird547 couldn’t agree more.
Hey guys what's up! Greetings from South Florida! This is one of them songs where you roll down the windows, turn up the stereo, and just lean back. You guys rock! God bless you! Peace!
How can you not love Warren G and Nate Dogg
One of the smoothest hip-hop songs ever. Nate Dogg killed it!!! RIP Nate Dogg
Man If no one has put you all on to some Slick Rick. The Album The art of storytelling is amazing and the title says it all!
Ok, y'all bobbing your heads in unison is too freaking cute!❤
Classic! Miss this music from my younger days
Love this song!!! My childhood!!!!!
I’m a Metal head but I also like old school hip hop. Anything up to about 1991. Ice T , Mantronix, Schoolly D, Grandmaster Flash, Public Enemy, Boogie Down Productions, T La Rock ect. LL Cool J’s - “Can’t live without my Radio” was what hooked me at the time.
Hell yeah man! Same here. I’ll go as far as Wu Tang Clan, NWA, Ice Cube so on and so forth! Keep old school music alive man! 🤘🤘
@@stephensupernor4481 yeah NWA as well. I used to play it over the loudspeaker when I was working on the railway station back in, I think it was 1990.
Still waiting for you guys to do an 80s rap and hip hop stream. You guys need to discover some EPMD, Eric B and Rakim, Digital Underground, Slick Rick, Boogie Down Productions, etc.
And MC Shan, Roxanne Shante, Kurtis Blow, ...
Cruise song!!!
Classic! 90s R & B funk laid back.This was massive all over the world!
I keep forgetting how dope this song was when I was a teenager back then 😆🤣😂
"I'm tweaking, into a whole new era, G-funk, step to this, I dare ya..." Love it!!! My fav part!!!!
I love this track, takes me back and always so chill
Are we expected to believe this is the first time these two have heard this joint?
It's the pinnacle of the genre and an all time musical classic FFS!!!
i loved her country analogy. cause country and hip hop at their core are the same thing. just story telling. with different beats and instruments. thats why collabs like Nelly and Tim McGraw or jason alden "dirt road anthem" sound so good. and off course i m ean real country and real hip hop
This song still gets played today.
This came out when I was like a freshman. Still the smoothest rap song to date. Nate Dog was untouchable. Just perfect.
G-Funk Westcoast rap! 🕺 💃
No waaaaay!!!! Finally!!!!!!😃💞🎶🔥🎵💞💞💞💞💞💞💞
absolutely love this song. takes me back to when i was younger every time i hear it. smooth vocals and a killer beat and one helluva sample.
Old school is the school 💯😉
saw Nate Dogg and Warren G with Snoop, Luniz, Heavy D and R. Kelly
the speaking part at the start is from the movie "young guns"
a classic. Takes me back to middle school.
Next you should do Lil Troy - Wanna Be A Baller. Awesome old-skool Hip Hop track
90's G-Funk era was awesome.....definitly
Nate Dogg still making bodies turn cold! RIP Nate! And I absolutely LOVE the intro from Young Guns! One of my favorite movies!
You should do more Warren G. The Regulate album is full of cool tunes.
90's Hip Hop and Rap was good stuff man. Hit it's peak back then with soooo many great songs just seemed like everyone was poppin hits. Ain't like that these days.
Also, this song was sampled from a 70's song by Michael McDonald "I keep forgettin".
one of the last old school hip hop albums
The "regulators" thing was from a movie called "Young Guns". It's a story about Billy the Kid during the Lincoln County War. BTK took a job as a regulator on Tunstall's property. They were basically private ranch security. When there was trouble the foreman would shout "REGULATORS MOUNT UP" (it was pretty bad ass). Which is why they sampled it for this song.
You gotta watch the muppets version of this. It’s so….satisfying
classic
Nate Dogg had such a sweet sound. So smooth. Miss him a lot...RIP
Brings me back to to mid 90’s when I was a wild child
Nobody by Nate Dogg should be on the playlist for smooth old school rap.
The intro is from the movie "Young Guns," by the character Charlie to Billy the Kid and the movie for this song is "Above the Rim."
Nate Dogg (the brother singing) is Snoop's cousin. Warren G then introduced Snoop to Dr. Dre. West coast hip hop royalty right here
I remember me and my sister jammin' to this all the time on our cassette tape of this song. We had the cassette tape of this record. Seriously, I'm that old. Cassette tape and you had to take a pencil and untwist, untangle the tape to fix the tape.
This track just brings back some sweet sweet memories of one the best summers I ever had. Dang.... 💜💜
Love how they use the young guns quote at the beginning ❤️
This was my introduction into rap. Warren G regulators CD was so good. I was like 9 or 10 listening to this in my room lol back in the early 90s. I was a skinny white ginger and couldn't relate to the lyrics, but I knew I loved the beats and hooks. Listening to rap that early, helped me expand my bass techniques later in life when I started learning to play bass in a band probably 5 years later. I think If it wasn't for this song in particular, I wouldn't have listened to older rap which brought funk into my life. Then brought the likes of Wooten and Bootsy. Which was the catalyst for actually learning bass. This song is weirdly nostalgic for me lol. Loved the reaction!
Lex never misses with her analysis. Love it
I love that Metallica Shirt. Your Transformation is complete!!!
Ahhhh such a great time for music. Every genre was made for everyone.
One of my favourite tunes still and cypress hill illusions they go hand in hand with me I love it.
This is one of the classic hip hop in my lifetime back home in Harlem