

- Mac and devin go to high school album artwork itunes movie#
- Mac and devin go to high school album artwork itunes mac#
Dogg blazed the trail for Khalifa and his peers, and their respective arguments and flows aren’t all that different. This song alone is a good reminder of why Khalifa has repeatedly been compared to the Godfather.
Mac and devin go to high school album artwork itunes mac#
The straightforward-ly titled “You Can Put it in a Zag, Imma Put it in a Blunt” features the two in all of their pot-addled glory, three minutes of Mac and Devin (oh right, these guys are in character) arguing about their preferred methods of pot delivery. The burbling synths, staccato horn section, and drum line punch of the opening track come together to make a lush impression the chorus of “you ain’t smokin’ what we smokin'” is pretty boilerplate. While some great rap about weed has come out in the last year or so (see Curren$y as a prime example), that ocean has pretty solidly been explored. The film would appear to be a Cheech and Chong acolyte after all, and as such the first three tracks are called “Smokin’ On”, “I Get Lifted”, and “You Can Put it in a Zag, Imma Put it In a Blunt”. While the beats are relatively varied throughout this disc, the content is consistent.


Mac and devin go to high school album artwork itunes movie#
But, considering the one-note message of this “soundtrack” (“Hey guys, we like weed!”) and the yet indefinite release of the movie it’s supposed to accompany, it’s a little easier to look at this as a joint release (get it?) from two of the rap world’s biggest pot enthusiasts. That said, the postponed film Mac and Devin Go To High School seems right up his alley, a buddy comedy where Snoop and Wiz Khalifa spend time in college getting high in the grand tradition of How High. Over the last few years, he has guested on songs by Katy Perry, Far East Movement, and Nickelodeon boy band Big Time Rush, appeared on the soap opera One Life to Live (three times, no less), written a song for a True Blood Character, and given a shout out to his “main man” Johnny Cash in the twang-inane “My Medicine”. At this point in his career, it seems like Snoop Dogg will do almost any project pitched to him.
