Stereogum Home

 

May 20, 2008

Video Hangover: Warren G (Feat. Nate Dogg) - "Regulate"

Every week, we dig in the archives for videos that we find noteworthy, memorable, or just unbelievably stupid. And then, Jon McMillan breaks 'em down for you. This week, Death Cab For Cutie are filling in.

By Ben Gibbard

"Regulate"
Warren G (Feat. Nate Dogg), 1994

My girlfriend and I were running errands around Seattle a couple weeks ago when this came on the radio during KUBE 93's "old school lunch hour" (it's kinda weird to think of 1994 as being "old school" but I guess it was almost 15 years ago). It quickly became brutally apparent that "Regulate" has fallen into that unfortunate category of hip hop songs that have not aged well at all. Here are some conversation snippets from the three and half minutes that followed:

  • "Who are these 'Regulators'? This guy talking at the top makes them sound like some sort of organized vigilanty group. Kinda like a hip hop guardian angels or something."
  • "Warren G sounds pretty wimpy on this track. That's saying something coming from me. If Nate Dogg didn't show up, I fell pretty confident that even I could jack him."
  • "What the fuck does 'the rhythm is the bass and the bass is the treble' mean?!"
  • "I think that if I just shot a bunch of guys the last thing on my mind would be chasing girls. I mean, that would kinda put a damper on the rest of the evening."
  • "Is it just me or can Nate Dogg not really sing? That 'Eastside motel' line sounded kinda rotten."
  • "Oh man, 'Pump Up The Volume' has aged better than this thing."

The video really brings all of that home.

Posted at 4:02 PM in , ,
Tags:  |  |




41 Comments

warren g is the man...that song is dope...you are trippin!

Posted by: seth at 05/20/08 4:56 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

its all about OLD SCHOOL LUNCH. way to represent.

Posted by: christian at 05/20/08 5:06 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

Heard this a few weeks ago. I only had one question for my friend that was standing next to me when it finished. Has there ever been another hip hop song that had the word swell in it? "I gotta car fulla girls and it's going real swell." That's about as "gangsta" as it gets folks.

Posted by: chris at 05/20/08 5:07 PM | Reply
Score = 2 Vote up Vote down

in my generation, you have to pick your battles when it comes to hip-hop. for people my age ["regulate" came out when a number of us were still in middle school-- but we're old enough to know what "old-school hip-hop" really is], regardless of how terribly the song has aged [although i agree, i have friends that would disagree vehemently], we don't have it as bad as kids that listen to hip-hop radio today. i would much rather listen to this than soulja boy. i'd rather have to listen to this song every day for the rest of my life than listen to soulja boy ever again.

and nate dogg is probably the best non-singer in hip-hop history.

Posted by: douglas martin at 05/20/08 5:09 PM | Reply
Score = 2 Vote up Vote down

I was baffled when this was a hit in the first place. You shoulda just given us Michael McDonald's "Keep Forgettin'" instead...

Posted by: Reed at 05/20/08 5:11 PM | Reply
Score = -2 Vote up Vote down

Dude, I have this song on my ipod and it's always a hit at parties.... hehehe.

Posted by: Michael at 05/20/08 5:23 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

I don't remember much about Above the Rim but it did have some good basketball sequences. I can't imagine that it aged any better than Regulate.

Posted by: yomomma at 05/20/08 5:32 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

Sir, I must say that you are way out of line, claiming this song has aged poorly. As I get older, and experience more of what life has to offer, more and more do I realize how Warren and Nate's "Regulate" speaks to the realities of modern life. And bitches. Like Shakespeare, Marcel Proust, and the people who write Grey's Anatomy, Nate and Warren understand some deep truths about the human condition -- and present these truths with considerable aplomb!

A deft split narrative, two protagonists relate a typical evening in the LBC from two unique perspectives. Warren searches for the simple pleasures of a dice game whilst Nate longs for tender companionship. But as Warren's quest becomes a desperate struggle of life and death, Nate discovers that friendship -- or brotherhood -- must take priority over pursuits of the flesh. That is to say, blood is thicker than Krystal... or, if you prefer: Bros before Hoes. BUT, after the climatic scene in which Nate dispatches Warren's assailants, the two "switch their mind back into freak mode"... and discover you truly CAN have your bitch and freak her too.

Of course, I neglect to mention the rich philosophical content of song: "Where rhythm is life and life is rhythm" and "rhythm is the bass and bass is the treble". Using the transitive property of logic, we see that life is both bass AND treble. This is Nate/Warren's unique twist on the ancient Chinese concept of Yin and Yang as well as their read on the Aristotelian notion of the eudaimonistic life...

There's too much to address here in the comments... but I think I've shown that "Regulate" is a timeless classic, certain to be cherished and enjoyed for centuries to come.

Posted by: Joey Headset profile link at 05/20/08 5:56 PM | Reply
Score = 25 Vote up Vote down

Yeah, what he said!

Posted by: Greg in reply to Joey Headset's comment at 05/20/08 6:16 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

joey headset, my friend, you have eloquated my finest feelings on this classic trunk-thumper. My skull-cap is off to you sir....

Posted by: threesus christ in reply to Joey Headset's comment at 05/20/08 7:25 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

"Warren G sounds pretty wimpy on this track. That's saying something coming from me. If Nate Dogg didn't show up, I fell pretty confident that even I could jack him."

Are you sure these are words you want to be tossing around lightly on the E-web?

If you ask for it, Warren G might just have to regulate your ass.

WEST SIDE!!!!!

Posted by: bettawatchyoass at 05/20/08 6:43 PM | Reply
Score = -1 Vote up Vote down

I was at a show here on Saturday night and it seemed like every one of my friends was three sheets except for me, which made the proceedings that much more fun. But one of my friends kept singing random old school jams and finally made his way to "Regulate". Everyone was just laughing at him up to this point, but there was something about "Regulate" that struck a chord and everyone gradually started to sing along with him (most of the words were mangled or repeated when they shouldn't have been but you get the idea). So, the song may have aged poorly, and most hip-hop does, but it is forever burned into our collective psyche.

Posted by: Zachra at 05/20/08 6:45 PM | Reply
Score = -1 Vote up Vote down

Oh and I forgot to ask......

People are still listening to the radio?

Posted by: Zachra at 05/20/08 6:47 PM | Reply
Score = -1 Vote up Vote down

People listen to talk radio for news and commentary but no, none listens to the radio for music anymore...unless you count internet radio and college radio. You don't do you?

Posted by: Sarah in reply to Zachra's comment at 05/22/08 3:55 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

The blues has always been totally American.

As American as apple pie.

As American as the blues, as American as apple pie. The question is why? Why should the blues be so at home here?

Well, America provided the atmosphere.

Ben Gibbard, you don't see.

Posted by: Bob at 05/20/08 7:03 PM | Reply
Score = -1 Vote up Vote down

I have always loved this song.. even after the old skool daiz!!! No more drugs fer me.... and I still smile when I hear this song Its on my puter and REGULATORS MOUNT UP!!!!

Posted by: Naomi at 05/20/08 7:45 PM | Reply
Score = -3 Vote up Vote down

MOUNT UP!

Posted by: get innocuous profile link at 05/20/08 7:57 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

Yeah that one's at least about five years off being able to be liked "ironically" I'd say

Make sure you check out the Yacht Rock episode about this track:
http://www.channel101.com/shows/view.php?media_id=1537

Posted by: Joe at 05/20/08 8:46 PM | Reply
Score = 1 Vote up Vote down

Nate Dogg can't sing? Pac NW kids don't know shit about rap anyways, but this makes me dislike Death Cab. Does Gibbard and his girlfriend think they're funny? Because they're not. At all.

Posted by: msg6v profile link at 05/20/08 8:49 PM | Reply
Score = -3 Vote up Vote down

the guy talking at the top is a sample from the movie young guns.

Posted by: aaron at 05/20/08 8:52 PM | Reply
Score = 1 Vote up Vote down

I'm not gonna go deep into detail because others have done a nice job of it already. However, I do need to at least voice my agreement with the majority of commentators when I say that you, Ben Gibbard, are a dumb ass if you truly believe that this song hasn't aged well. "Regulate" is dope. It always will be. Sure it's simple but it's one of the most accessible (as well as fun to actually sing along with) "gangsta" rap songs ever.

Posted by: Guido Sarducci IV at 05/20/08 11:29 PM | Reply
Score = -2 Vote up Vote down

Regulate II: Jay Z's babies rap over "Soul Meets Body."

Also, Ben's GF needs to back away from "Pump Up The Volume."

Posted by: John S at 05/20/08 11:35 PM | Reply
Score = -1 Vote up Vote down

dude, I'm too lazy to read what all you other honkies have said in response to this post but, if i'm not mistaken, the "regulators, mount up!" line was from Young Guns because that little snippet in the beginning is from Young Guns (maybe Young Guns 2...?). Anyway, that song is now, and will forever be, AWESOME. Yeah, it's a little cheesy these days but it was pretty cheesy back when it came out too. That's the fun of it! Every white dude can learn all the words and do his hip-hop posturing at a party to this song. It's fucking GOLD. And don't question the G-funk man, they can say whatever they want about bass or treble or whatever, simply because they ARE G-funk. Word
Lurv,
Adam from MoreVolume

Posted by: Adam at 05/20/08 11:41 PM | Reply
Score = -2 Vote up Vote down

Finally, I'm not alone in the world. I absolutely agree with you. I can never understand why everyone is so hyped about this song. When I see people drive around and hear them blast that song in their car, makes me sad. I'm sure that those that listen to the song don't even understand the full context of the song. They listen mainly for the beat and recognition of a good time.
The only time I listen to Kube 93 is during the old school session. To either make fun of the songs or here an old familiar song that actually had meaning. Which is a rare occasion.

Posted by: Ruthy at 05/21/08 1:15 AM | Reply
Score = -2 Vote up Vote down

I think that "the rhythm is the bass and the bass is the treble" means that the rhythm is performing the role of the bassline and that the bassline is supposedly acting more as what would typically be found in the treble.

Posted by: Bubba at 05/21/08 2:49 AM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

I think that "the rhythm is the bass and the bass is the treble" means that the rhythm is performing the role of the bassline and that the bassline is supposedly acting more as what would typically be found in the treble.

Posted by: Bubba at 05/21/08 2:49 AM | Reply
Score = -1 Vote up Vote down

OK, is BG havin' a laff with us here or what? Ben Gibbard (or maybe it was his girlfriend) saying "Is it just me or can Nate Dogg not really sing? That 'Eastside motel' line sounded kinda rotten" sounds too outrageous to be entirely earnest. Say it ain't so, Ben, or else I'm deleting all my illegally downloaded Death Cab mp3s.

Posted by: Incredulous at 05/21/08 2:54 AM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

in response to MSG: i highly disagree with you about saying pacific northwest kids don't know shit about rap. i listened to hip-hop nearly exclusively for a good portion of my life. no need to dis the whole region, boss.

Posted by: douglas martin at 05/21/08 8:43 AM | Reply
Score = -1 Vote up Vote down

When I was eleven I thoroughly enjoyed this song. My friends and I always go back and listen to songs we loved in our adolescence. A good majority turn out to be dreadful. Do me a favor and just read the lyrics to damn near any Mystikal song. They won't let you down.

Posted by: mikey (imagine/dance) at 05/21/08 9:24 AM | Reply
Score = 1 Vote up Vote down

Hey Bob:
I see what you did there!

Posted by: leoscuro at 05/21/08 9:41 AM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

douglas, i agree. broad generalizations can easily hurt feelings and make the generalizer look stupid, just ask noel gallagher.

Posted by: msg6v profile link at 05/21/08 9:48 AM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

i'm getting an L.A. Gear reference dropped on my ass every time REGULATORS gets shouted at the start of this song. also, nate dogg's tone is sooooooooooooooo unique. it is instantly recognizable and it's so chill. and of course warren g sounds relaxed on this track. The song defines chill. It ain't nobody trying to come off aggressive in tone, it's a chill track. ben gibbard is apparently developmentally delayed....either that or he does not know how to indicate that his tongue is in his cheek....anyways, yeah a douche he is.

Posted by: adroc cliptor at 05/21/08 11:30 AM | Reply
Score = -2 Vote up Vote down

the "regulators" sound bite is taken from the movie Young Guns.

Posted by: Adam C. at 05/21/08 4:46 PM | Reply
Score = -1 Vote up Vote down

wow, how did you crack the code?

Posted by: pin in reply to Adam C.'s comment at 06/17/08 7:07 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

As far as mainstream gangsta rap goes, most of Dr. Dre's stuff has aged extremely well. Warren G sucked even when he first came out.

Posted by: steve at 05/21/08 5:52 PM | Reply
Score = 2 Vote up Vote down

Okay, guys, honestly, this song -is- pretty bad. It's amusing in a "wow I can't believe this even got made" way, and I think--I hate to presume--that that's what Ben is saying. It's like Mystery Science Theater 3000.
But to hear a really good example of a rap artist attempting to sing and failing miserably, check out Snoop Dogg covering "Sad But True"... and yes, the song was appropriately chosen.

Posted by: ^_^ at 05/22/08 6:58 PM | Reply
Score = 2 Vote up Vote down

This song was incredible when it came out, and it will forever remain a classic. Put down the hatorade children.

If you aren't familiar with it, check out "This DJ" from the same album. Warren G was the man.

Posted by: 2080 at 05/26/08 7:10 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

By the way, the "guy talking at the top" is cut from a movie. It's called Young Guns.... maybe you have heard of it? At least educate pretend like you know what you're talking about before blasting a classic.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dC4dURfuIXM

Posted by: 2080 at 05/26/08 7:18 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

By the way, the "guy talking at the top" is cut from a movie. It's called Young Guns.... maybe you have heard of it? At least pretend like you know what you're talking about before blasting a classic.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dC4dURfuIXM

Posted by: 2080 at 05/26/08 7:18 PM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

Just proves how Hip Hop/Rap/Top 40 hasn't progressed at all in nearly 15 years. Dizzee Rascal is pretty good, but doesn't it speak loads that we're being out-thuged by the Brits?

Posted by: Boy Williams at 05/28/08 3:33 AM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

It's weird that I wandered on this since Nate Dogg is in the news for having a second stroke...get better, Nate.

Ben, I'm a fan of this song. It's a classic. When I was in the Army, we called our squad "Regulators". We were pretty tight knit.

Posted by: Luis at 09/17/08 4:43 AM | Reply
Score = 0 Vote up Vote down

Leave a comment


Staff

  • Founder/Editor-In-Chief: Scott Lapatine
  • Executive Editor: Amrit Singh
  • Senior Writer: Brandon Stosuy

Info

Contact

Get Flash to see our mp3 player. Here are our mp3s: Jonathan Boulet - A Community Service Announcement (The Album Leaf Remix) (»)
El Guincho - Antillas (XXXchange remix) (»)
El Guincho - Antillas (»)
Wolf People - October Fires (»)
Fan Death - Cannibal (»)
Fan Death - Reunited (CCENTURIESS Remix) (»)
Chll Pll - Dick Moves (»)
Chll Pll - Pass Out (»)
Beck - Harry Partch (»)
Tim Cohen - Haunted Hymns (»)
Tim Cohen - Take Aim Goliath (»)
Ducktails - Sandglider (»)
tUnE-YaRdS - Hatari (Drunkenmonkey Remix) (»)
tUnE-YaRdS - Hatari (Karn Remix) (»)
Beach House - Norway (»)
The Golden Filter - Thunderbird (»)
Crystal Antlers - It's All Over Now, Baby Blue (Bob Dylan Cover) (»)
CFCF - How Bizarre (OMC Cover) (»)
The Acorn - Strange Animal (Gowan Cover) (»)
Black Tambourine - Black Car (»)
Boyracer - Sunshine And Violence (»)
Henry's Dress - 1620 (»)
Honeybunch - Mine Your Own Business (»)
Lilys - Claire Hates Me (»)
Lilys - February Fourteenth (»)
Lorelei - Today's Shrug (»)
Sleepyhead - Different Colored Letters (»)
Small Factory - Merry-Go-Round (»)
Swirlies - Sarah Sitting (»)
The Ropers - Waiting (»)
Velocity Girl - My Forgotten Favorite (»)
Monsters Of Folk - Say Please (»)
Rain Machine - Give Blood (»)
Wetdog - Tidy Up Your Bedroom (»)
Brendan Benson - Feel Like Taking You Home (»)
Yeasayer - Ambling Alp (Memory Tapes Remix) (»)
Solange - Stillness Is The Move (Dirty Projectors Cover) (»)
Pearl Harbor - California Shakedown (»)
LoneLady - Immaterial (»)
Andrew Cedermark - Hard Livin' (»)
Family Portrait - Super Cool (»)
The Soft Pack - Answer To Yourself (»)
Bear In Heaven - Dust Cloud (»)
Bear In Heaven - Lovesick Teenagers (»)
Atlas Sound - Doctor (Five Discs Cover) (»)
Atlas Sound - The Screens (»)
Cloud Nothings - Hey Cool Kid (»)
The Mary Onettes - Dare (»)
The Mary Onettes - Puzzles (»)
Digital Leather - Photo Lie (»)
Memory Tapes - Easy Pert Mom (»)
Memory Tapes - Graphics (Sci-Fi Edit) (»)

Progress Report logo
Commercial Appeal logo
Premature Evaluation logo
Band to Watch logo
Quit Your Day Job logo
The Outsiders logo
The 'Gum Drop logo