Busta Rhymes Songs - Pass The Courvoisier Part II Lyrics
lyrics
3/26/2016
2002
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Busta Rhymes Songs
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Pass The Courvoisier Part II Lyrics
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Single Release Only
Busta Rhymes - Pass The Courvoisier Part II |
Busta Rhymes - Pass The Courvoisier Part II Youtube Music Videos and Lyrics
Album: single release only
Released: 2002
Pass The Courvoisier Part II Lyrics
Pass The Courvoisier Part II Song Chart
"Scenario" by A Tribe Called Quest. Busta performed on this 1992 song, which used various samples of its own, including "Give It Up" by Kool & the Gang and "Little Miss Lover" by Jimi Hendrix.
"Shake Ya Ass" by Mystikal. This one was also written and produced by The Neptunes and features Pharrell on vocals.
"Easy Come, Easy Go" by Odyssey. This 1977 song was by a New York Disco group who had their biggest hit with "Native New Yorker" that same year. The song was written by Sandy Linzer and Denny Randell, who wrote some hits for The Four Seasons. Providing some insight on how all these samples were cleared, Randell told us : "We worked it out with Warner Brothers at that time - they were licensed to use what they wanted to made their record."
"Rapper's Delight" by The Sugarhill Gang. The part used sampled the famous bassline created by Bernard Edwards in "Good Times" by Chic, which he wrote with Nile Rodgers.
A total of 16 writers are credited on this track: Busta, Diddy, The Neptunes, and the composers of all the sampled material.
While there was no official deal with Courvoisier, the company did sponsor some lavish parties after some of Busta's concerts to show their support.
Marketing to the hip-hop community became a very big deal for luxury beverage companies. In 2010, Hennessy launched Hennessy Black by commissioning a Swizz Beatz theme song for the drink called "When I Step Into the Club." Thanks to the rap community, cognac (or "the yak") sales bumped up about 37% from 2001-2007 before dropping in 2008 because of the recession. Companies who did not embrace this audience faced a backlash: When a Cristal executive answered a question about rappers mentioning the brand by saying, "What can we do? We can't forbid people from buying it," Jay-Z declared the company racist and pulled Cristal from his 40/40 sports bars.