

Each song satisfyingly sways from one track to the other without a single cut, seamlessly captivating listeners with elements of hip-hop, R&B, blues, and jazz all bitten by the gospel bug. As has been typical of Snoop Dogg’s latest musical endeavors,īible of Love is a wonderfully mixed album that you can start a convincing groove to whether you’re listening to it on audiophile-friendly headphones or $10 earphones from your local grocery store. The production present on the megalith of an album is, as some might say, heavenly. While Snoop shines when he offers his chill vocal consignment to the Word of God, he’s mostly sitting behind the production booth on Bible of Love while an entire swath of guest stars lead the charge. With a whopping 32 tracks present on the album, folks might come to wonder how he would have so many verses to spit in a single effort, and the answer to that particular question is simpler than some might assume-he doesn’t. All in all, this can be seen as an argument both for and against the unpredictably of Snoop’s latest Biblical undertaking.įor a man who has been everything from g-funk pioneer to genuine Rastafarian, soul man, and even country crooner in his time, though, it shouldn’t come as much of a surprise that Snoop’s latest antics on hisīible of Love come across as sweet and real. All of this has just been over the past year and goes without mentioning the majority of his nearly three decades of outrageous artistic endeavors and accusations. The Joker’s Wild, and asked us all to Make America Crip Again while pulling a gun on a rather familiar clown in a recent music video. Of course, this is coming from the same guy who has hosted a cooking show alongside Martha Stewart, hosted a new edition of


If you weren’t sure what to think when Snoop Dogg announced that he’d be making a gospel album, you wouldn’t be the only one.
