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7 Days of Funk (album)

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2013 studio album by 7 Days of Funk
7 Days of Funk
Studio album by
ReleasedDecember 10, 2013 (2013-12-10)
Recorded2013;
The Compound
(Los Angeles,California)
Funkmosphere Lab
(Los Angeles, California)
Genre
Length33:56
LabelStones Throw
Producer
Dâm-Funk chronology
Higher
(2013)
7 Days of Funk
(2013)
Invite the Light
(2015)
Snoopzilla chronology
Royal Fam
(2013)
7 Days of Funk
(2013)
That's My Work 3
(2014)
Singles from 7 Days of Funk
  1. "Faden Away"
    Released: October 15, 2013

7 Days of Funk is theeponymous debut and onlystudio album byCalifornia-basedfunk duo7 Days of Funk, consisting ofrapperSnoop Dogg—performing under his funk persona Snoopzilla—and modern-funk musicianDām-Funk. The album was released on December 10, 2013, byStones Throw Records and is Snoop's first project with a single producer since his landmark 1993 debut album,Doggystyle.[2] Recording sessions for the album took place in 2013 at The Compound and at Funkmosphere Lab inLos Angeles, and the mastering was performed atBernie Grundman Mastering inHollywood.[3]

Guest appearances on the album includeTha Dogg Pound membersDaz Dillinger andKurupt, and formerSlave frontmanSteve Arrington.[4] The album was supported by thesingle "Faden Away", followed by thepromotional single "Hit Da Pavement".7 Days of Funk was met with generally positive reviews frommusic critics with an average score of 74 atMetacritic, based on 19 reviews. It was named inHipHopDX's list of top 25 albums of 2013.[5]

Background

[edit]

Calvin "Snoopzilla" Broadus andDamon "Dām-Funk" Riddick met inLos Angeles on February 16, 2011, at the opening of The Dogg House—anexhibition of Snoop-inspired artwork—when the latter performed at a gallery party thrown for Joe Cool, the illustrator behind the cover artwork to several Snoop records including his seminal 1993 debut album,Doggystyle.[6][7][8] Impressed by Dām'sP-Funk-inspired beats, Snoop grabbed the microphone andfreestyled for more than an hour. "It felt like magic," Snoop recalls.[9][10] After the initial meeting, the two paired when the rapper invited the funk musician to playkeyboard andkeytar onstage for a performance atFunk n Soul Extravaganza at theSXSW Music Festival on March 19, 2011.[11][12] They forged a mutual admiration; then unexpectedly, Snoop sent Dām a crypticSoundCloud message: "I need some of that heat."[13] ForStones Throw Records founderChris "Peanut Butter Wolf" Manak, "It made perfect sense for them to [collaborate]. They're approximately the same age, and they both [represent] Los Angelesfunk the hardest."[13]

In an October 2013 interview withRolling Stone, Snoop commented on their collaboration, saying "We're the babies of theMothership. I've had funk influences in my music my whole career. Dām-Funk is cold. He's keeping the funk alive and I knew I had to get down with him." Dām-Funk echoed Snoop's sentiments as he elaborated: "These beats were made for him and he laid down some of the smoothest harmonies and melodies I've ever heard. It's hip-hop, but you can also hear what we grew up on, fromZapp toEvelyn "Champagne" King andPatrice Rushen."[14]

Snoop also spoke about re-branding himself as Snoopzilla for this project, which pays homage toFunkadelicmaestroBootsy Collins who sometimes uses the monikers Bootzilla as well as Zillatron, saying "When I'm recording as Snoopzilla, I'm basically an offspring of Bootsy [Collins]. We're keeping that spirit alive with that tone, that delivery, thatR&B/funk singing, likeRick James andSteve Arrington. And on this EP, I was on some relationship shit: being tired of the one that I'm with and trying to be with the one that I'm with—shit where I'm questioning the one that I love. I'm not even talking about nobody personally. Is it music? Is it my wife? I'm questioning something! I don't even know what the fuck it is. As time goes by, I get a clearer vision on why I'm saying what I said, because some of these songs are really affecting me right now emotionally. They were just songs I did out of the spirit of having fun, but when I write shit, it comes to motherfucking life."[15]

Recording and production

[edit]

[…] [Snoop] came to the pad with no entourage or anything. We went through some tracks and he stumbled on one, and we recorded the vocals right there. It's called "Hit Da Pavement". After it stopped, he was like, "Man, this is too good, I wanna do an EP." We went on from that and started gelling organically, no business people involved, no labels, no management. From that point, we got down and here we are with an EP. We have more, but we're going to save the extra tracks; seven songs goes with the theme of7 Days of Funk.

— Dâm-Funk, speaking in December 2013, withLife+Times about how the project came to be.[16]

7 Days of Funk was recorded inLos Angeles in 2013 by Shon Lawon at The Compound, except "Hit Da Pavement" which was recorded by Dām-Funk at Funkmosphere Lab.[3] The album,mixed by Cole M.G.N. and Shon Lawon, with additionalengineering by Frank Vasquez, wasmastered atBernie Grundman Mastering inHollywood by Brian "Big Bass" Gardner.[3] The album featuresguest appearances from Snoop'sTha Dogg Pound cohortsDaz Dillinger andKurupt, as well as drummer-vocalistSteve Arrington.[4] According to Dām-Funk, other artists including rapperTyler, The Creator wanted to be involved on the project, but time ran out.[15] All songs are produced by Dām-Funk and featurebackground vocals from Shan Lawon andVal Young.[3]

The album opener, "Hit Da Pavement", which features additional vocals fromBootsy Collins, was the first track 7 Days of Funk recorded.[15][17] In an interview forPitchfork, Dām-Funk expressed that "the energy was so explosive" with "Hit Da Pavement" and that he was impressed by Snoopzilla's work ethic. "[Snoop] came to the pad at 10 p.m. and we were done at midnight. He killed it. His work ethic is stupid, man. I've never seen anything like it. I was [in] New York, inA1 [Record Shop] just listening to some records, and Snoop calls, like, 'Hey man, you need to check this out, check your email.' Four hours later I'm at the club, and he's like, 'Hey man, check these out, two more done.' He was just smashing them. When you're inspired by something, that's how you do it."[15]

Dām-Funk created the music, and Snoopzilla came up with the vocals, then Dām took it from there. "I was like, 'I'm letting Dam-Funk produce me, so produce me'," Snoop explained during an interview withSpin.[18] "That's what the project was all about – him having the comfort zone of doing what he do, with no 'Hey man, we've got to get this done by this date.' No pressure, no dates, no nothing. We worked when we wanted to work and made what we wanted to make."[18] Dām-Funk gave Snoopzilla creative freedom on each song. "I just left it up to Snoop," he toldHipHopDX. "I mean he was in charge of all of that. He really did a good job. And it was like a telepathic type of vibe, where I didn't have to say too much or anything at all. It's like he just handled it and knew where to put different nuances in and place the cadences. His rhythm matches everything I wanna hear on a track. So it worked out beautifully."[19]

Snoopzilla explained that he and Dām made the album only thirty-four minutes in length because it would induce the listener to want more. "We just be looking at it like it's only 34 minutes of music. That's all we gave up was 34 minutes. But it's 34 minutes of quality music, good music. Babygirl that [did an] interview with me, she was like, 'That music reminds me of a big hug. I could just play it from top to bottom.' There's a lot of albums you can't play from top to bottom anymore, you gotta go to your favorite song and go back and go forward. This record you could play from top to bottom. And it's 34 minutes, so by the time you get to where you going, it just started all over again, and you back riding again."[19]

Title and artwork

[edit]

According to Snoop, the album title,7 Days of Funk, refers to the amount of time it took to create the project. "Seven songs. And seven days to find the funk," he said during an interview withSpin. "You only get seven days in a week, but you found that funk, so you can continue. You can funk for another seven days. You can funk until the end of time. But those seven days are what's important. We just going one week at a time, and we trying to make sure we handle you on every day of that week. With the funk."[18] Dām explained toLife+Times that7 Days of Funk is self-explanatory. "Just imagine living seven days of funk. That's what your life, what you're living and breathing. There's only seven days in a week, so what's after that? Another seven days of funk."[16]

Directed by Stones Throw cover artist Jeff Jank, the album artwork is drawn by Lawrence "Raw Dawg" Hubbard, co-founder and artist behind Los Angeles cult magazine,Real Deal Comix. Thevinyl LP edition features a wrap-around drawing showing the front and back of a theater. Snoopzilla and Dām-Funk are hanging out in front of their low rider—a time machine, in fact—with some thuggish throw-down happening at the theater doors. On the back, there is paparazzi, drunks and prostitutes.[20]

Promotion

[edit]

On October 15, 2013,Stones Throw published onYouTube the behind-the-scenes of 7 Days of Funk's jam session at Funkmosphere Lab in which an early version of "Hit Da Pavement" and "Wingz" were previewed.[21] On October 21, 2013, theSouthern California duo performed "Faden Away" onJimmy Kimmel Live!, along with another song from the album entitled "Do My Thang".[22] For promotional purposes,7 Days of Funk was made available tostream on December 1, 2013, viaNPR Music until the album's release.[23] Stones Throw released "Hit Da Pavement" and "Faden Away" together on acassingle on December 10, 2013, with both vocal and instrumental versions. Thecassette was given away exclusively with the first week's orders of theLP and45box set.[24] The 45 box set was released on February 5, 2014, with a total of eight records with sixteen tracks: each song on the album released on7-inch single, backed with its instrumental version. The box includes the bonus record "Wingz"—not available on any other format—with A-side "Systematic". Purchase of the box set comes with a digital download of the original 8-track album and a 7 Days of Funk sticker.[25]

On December 9, 2013,Rdio published on YouTube a 1980sVHS-quality promotional video created by Golden Wolf—ananimation production company—featuring Dām-Funk and Snoopzilla asMuppets-inspiredmarionettes performing their song "Do My Thang".[26]7 Days of Funk—including the exclusive bonus track "Wingz"—was streaming exclusively on Rdio on December 9 until December 24.[27][28] On December 9, 2013, the duo performed "Faden Away" onConan, andThe Queen Latifah Show on the following day.[29][30][31] The album was officially released on LP,CD anddigital download formats on December 10, 2013.[32] On the same day, the music video for "Hit Da Pavement" premiered on 7 Days of Funk'sVEVO.[33] By evening, Dām-Funk and Snoopzilla celebrated the release of7 Days of Funk at the ExchangeNight Club in Los Angeles, performing live withPeanut Butter Wolf (host),Egyptian Lover,Bootsy Collins,Steve Arrington and special guests.[34] On January 15, 2014, the music video was released for "I'll Be There 4U".[35] On February 26, 2014, the music video was released for "Do My Thang".[36]

Singles

[edit]

Thelead single, "Faden Away", premiered on October 8, 2013, onStones Throw Records'SoundCloud page and was made available at the Stones Throw Store andiTunes Music Store on October 15, 2013.[37] On November 5, 2013, the music video was released for the track.[38] 7 Days of Funk named "Faden Away" as their favorite song on the album.[19]

Critical reception

[edit]
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic74/100[39]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[40]
Blurt Magazine[41]
Exclaim!9/10[42]
HipHopDX[43]
The New York Times[44]
Pitchfork Media7.0/10[45]
Rolling Stone[46]
Slant Magazine[47]
Spin7/10[48]
XXL4/5 (XL)[49]

7 Days of Funk received generally positive reviews frommusic critics. AtMetacritic, which assigns anormalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received anaverage score of 74, based on 19 reviews.[39] Matt Bauer ofExclaim! praised the album, and commented that "Apart from a generic cameo fromKurupt on 'Ride',7 Days of Funk is an infectious, modern take on the funk genre – here's hoping that Snoopzilla and Dām-Funk will collaborate again."[42]HipHopDX reviewer Jessica Rew praised7 Days of Funk, believing the collection features Dām-Funk's best production work to date and viewed it as "Snoop's most enjoyable album in years".[43] Chisom Uzosike ofXXL, who awarded the album an "XL" rating, shared a similar sentiment and expressed that "George Clinton would be proud of this fresh take on funk music."[49] Phil Hebblethwaite ofNME describes the album as "a groove and a mood piece; a funk report for the ages and the future – and, after less than 40 minutes (including the bonus tracks), it drops out of space at exactly the right moment."[50] Ron Hart ofBlurt Magazine expressed that despite the name of the project being7 Days of Funk, "there's enough groove in this [record] to last a lifetime."[41]

David Jeffries ofAllMusic compared the album to Snoop Lion'sreggae effortReincarnated (2013), commenting that7 Days of Funk "is pleasingly loose and small" unlikeReincarnated "which seemed to trip over its own overambition". In conclusion, he wrote that "Even if this is Snoop's first album with a single producer since the monolithic,Dr. Dre-helmedDoggystyle, don't call it a comeback, call it lark, and a funky, welcome one at that."[40] Andy Beta ofSpin felt that "7 Daysacts as the inverse ofThe Chronic," elaborating that in the latter "a famous hip-hop producer introduced the world to an up-and-coming MC weaned onP-Funk andGeorge Duke now, it's a pop-cultural hip-hop icon giving a bit of shine to an adept indie producer who can elicit all strains of funk in this 21st-century Zone of Zero Funkativity."[48] Dave Heaton ofPopMatters claimed that "A laidback funk groove is the essence of7 Days of Funk, with Snoopzilla's vocals taking his relaxed approach to its full. […] To say Dām-Funk is engineering a new kind of funk would be a misstatement; to say he has a keen sense for the atmosphere as well as the rhythms of funk, an understanding of what really makes for a classic funk track, would be an understatement."[51]Pitchfork writer Nate Patrin wrote that "It's a strong mode to be in, but7 Days of Funk doesn't change or challenge things—it's a brief LP, even accounting for bonus tracks, and with everybody firmly in a comfortable lane there's not much surprise."[45]

In a mixed review,Rolling Stone's Mike Powell felt that "While Snoop's voice is an easy match for the sound—both are low-key but hard-hitting—most of the tracks don't quite cohere."[46] Brian Josephs ofConsequence of Sound also provided a mixed review, calling7 Days of Funk a "slog through shallow percussion (especially in the amateurish drum pattern on the Kurupt-featuring 'Ride') and drowsy synthwork". The reviewer described the duo's productivity as "the musical equivalent to two longtime friends spending a Saturday afternoon on the couch".[52] Chase Woodruff, writer forSlant Magazine, wrote that "No amount of pitch correction and filtering can change the fact that Calvin Broadus, no matter what he calls himself, can't sing, and7 Days of Funk is as lyrically empty an album as you'll hear this year; any message it may have is exclusively vibe-based. But it's a welcome sign of life from an MC who many assumed to be over the hill, and where it fails, it fails on its own terms—and that's a kind of success in itself."[47]

Track listing

[edit]
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Hit Da Pavement"4:16
2."Let It Go"4:34
3."Faden Away"
  • Broadus
  • Riddick
5:40
4."1Question?" (featuringSteve Arrington)
  • Broadus
  • Riddick
  • Steve Arrington
3:45
5."Ride" (featuringKurupt)
4:04
6."Do My Thang"
  • Broadus
  • Riddick
4:47
7."I'll Be There 4U"
  • Broadus
  • Riddick
3:18
Bonus track – 8th day…[3]
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
8."Systamatic" (featuringTha Dogg Pound)
3:32
Total length:33:56
iTunes bonus track[53]
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
9."High Wit' Me"
  • Broadus
  • Riddick
3:02
Total length:36:58
45 box set bonus track[54]
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
9."Wingz"
  • Broadus
  • Riddick
3:25
Notes[3]

Personnel

[edit]

Credits for7 Days of Funk adapted fromAllMusic[55] and from the album liner notes.[3]

Chart positions

[edit]
Chart (2013)[56]Peak
position
USIndependent Albums (Billboard)[57]33
USTop R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[58]27
USRap Albums (Billboard)[59]14
USHeatseekers Albums (Billboard)[60]2
USTastemaker Albums (Billboard)[61]13

Release history

[edit]
DateFormat(s)LabelEditionCatalogRef.
December 10, 2013LP,CD,digital downloadStones ThrowStandardSTH2334[32]
February 5, 2014LP45Box SetSTH2335[25]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Snoop Dogg x DāM-FunK Present 7 Days Of Funk [Stream]".Okayplayer.com. 4 Dec 2013. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  2. ^"7 Days of Funk | 7 Days of Funk | Stones Throw Records". Stones Throw. Retrieved25 Oct 2013.
  3. ^abcdefg7 Days of Funk (Media notes). 7 Days of Funk.Stones Throw Records. 2013.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  4. ^abKaraslamb (15 Oct 2013)."Snoop Speaks On "Snoopzilla" & DāM-FunK Collabo LP". Okayplayer. Retrieved25 Oct 2013.
  5. ^DX Staff (30 Dec 2013)."HipHopDX's Top 25 Albums Of 2013 | Discussing Lil' Wayne, Drake & Many More Hip Hop Artists".HipHopDX.com. Archived fromthe original on 22 January 2014. Retrieved30 Dec 2013.
  6. ^"adidas, HVW8 and Snoop present The Dogg House".HVW8.com. February 2011. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  7. ^"Snoop Dogg & Dam Funk | Stones Throw Records". Stones Throw. 17 Feb 2011. Retrieved25 Oct 2013.
  8. ^Carbone, Bradley (16 Feb 2011)."Exhibit See: The Dogg House Opens Tonight at HVW8 Gallery in L.A."Complex.com. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  9. ^Gale, Alex (22 Nov 2013)."Snoop Dogg Eschews Major Labels for Retro "7 Days of Funk" With Dam-Funk".Billboard.com.Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  10. ^"Snoop Dogg x Dam-Funk x HVW8".HVW8.com. 2011. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  11. ^"7 DAYS OF FUNK - DAM FUNK & SNOOP | Stones Throw Records". Stones Throw. 15 Oct 2013. Retrieved25 Oct 2013.
  12. ^Weiss, Jeff (20 Mar 2011)."SXSW 2011 Snoop Dogg, Dogg Pound, Warren G, Dam-Funk and Mayer Hawthorne pay tribute to Nate Dogg, reconfigure modern funk".latimes.com. Retrieved13 Dec 2013.
  13. ^abWeiss, Jeff (29 Nov 2013)."Dam-Funk Drives Us Around L.A., Discusses 'Invite the Light' Album and 7 Days of Funk".self-titledmag.com. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  14. ^Blistein, Jon (15 Oct 2013)."Snoop Dogg Rebrands as 'Snoopzilla' for Album With Dam-Funk".Rolling Stone. Retrieved25 Oct 2013.
  15. ^abcdCohen, Ian (16 Oct 2013)."Update: Snoopzilla and Dâm-Funk".Pitchfork Media. Retrieved25 Oct 2013.
  16. ^abPeterson, Quinn (11 Dec 2013)."Dam-Funk Speaks On New EP With Snoop Dogg, '7 Days Of Funk'".Life+Times. Retrieved14 Dec 2013.
  17. ^Edwards, Gavin (9 Dec 2013)."Snoopzilla Talks '7 Days of Funk,' Dr. Dre's 'Detox' | Music News".RollingStone.com. Retrieved11 Dec 2013.
  18. ^abcMartins, Chris (6 Dec 2013)."Old Doggs, New Tricks: Snoopzilla and Dam-Funk Talk '7 Days of Funk'".Spin.com. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  19. ^abcBaker, Soren (10 Dec 2013)."Dam-Funk & Snoopzilla Explain Why Their "7 Days Of Funk" Sounds Like A Big Hug".HipHopDX.com. Archived fromthe original on 13 December 2013. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  20. ^"7 Days of Funk album artwork".StonesThrow.com. 22 Oct 2013. Retrieved11 Dec 2013.
  21. ^"7 Days Of Funk - D-F & Snoopzilla".YouTube.com. Stones Throw. 15 Oct 2013. Retrieved11 Dec 2013.
  22. ^Weinstein, Max (22 Oct 2013)."Snoop Dogg and Dam-Funk Perform on 'Jimmy Kimmel Live!'". Vibe. Retrieved25 Oct 2013.
  23. ^Bussolini, Brandon (1 Dec 2013)."First Listen: 7 Days Of Funk, '7 Days Of Funk'".NPR.org. Retrieved11 Dec 2013.
  24. ^"7 Days of Funk: the CASSINGLE | Stones Throw Records".StonesThrow.com. 2 Dec 2013. Retrieved11 Dec 2013.
  25. ^ab"7 Days of Funk | 7 Days of Funk (45 Box Set)".StonesThrow.com. Retrieved11 Dec 2013.
  26. ^"Rdio New Music Weekly - featuring Dam-Funk & Snoopzilla".YouTube.com.Rdio. 9 Dec 2013. Retrieved11 Dec 2013.
  27. ^"7 Days Of Funk - 7 Days Of Funk (Rdio Exclusive Bonus Track Version)".Rdio.com. 9 Dec 2013. Retrieved11 Dec 2013.
  28. ^"Snoop and Dam-Funk Release "7 Days of Funk"".SnoopDogg.com. 10 Dec 2013. Archived fromthe original on 2013-12-10. Retrieved13 Dec 2013.
  29. ^"Rap-Up.com || Video: 7 Days of Funk (Snoopzilla x Dam-Funk) – 'Hit Da Pavement'".Rap-Up.com. 10 Dec 2013. Retrieved23 Dec 2013.
  30. ^"Snoop Dogg & Dam-Funk Are 'Faden Away' On 'Conan' & 'Queen Latifah'".SoulBounce.com. 11 December 2013. Archived fromthe original on 24 December 2013. Retrieved23 December 2013.
  31. ^"7 Days of Funk feat. Snoopzilla & Dam Funk 'Faden Away' 12/09/13".TeamCoco.com. 10 Dec 2013. Archived fromthe original on 11 December 2013. Retrieved11 Dec 2013.
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  34. ^Roberts, Randall (11 Dec 2013)."Review Snoop, Dam-Funk, Bootsy, others celebrate '7 Days of Funk'".latimes.com. Retrieved11 Dec 2013.
  35. ^"Video: 7 Days of Funk – 'I'll Be There 4U'". Rap-Up.com. 2010-10-18. Retrieved2014-01-17.
  36. ^"Snoopzilla & Dam-Funk "Do My Thang" Video". Complex. 2013-12-07. Retrieved2014-02-27.
  37. ^"iTunes - Music - Faden Away - Single by 7 Days of Funk".iTunes.apple.com. Archived fromthe original on March 17, 2014. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  38. ^"Video: 7 Days of Funk (Snoopzilla x Dam-Funk) – 'Faden Away'". Rap-Up.com. Retrieved2013-12-10.
  39. ^ab"7 Days of Funk Reviews - Metacritic.htm".Metacritic.com. Retrieved29 Jan 2014.
  40. ^abJeffries, David (9 Dec 2013)."7 Days of Funk - 7 Days of Funk | Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards".AllMusic.com. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  41. ^abHart, Ron (10 Dec 2013)."7 DAYS OF FUNK – 7 Days of Funk | Blurt Magazine".BlurtOnline.com. Archived fromthe original on 13 December 2013. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  42. ^abBauer, Matt (6 Dec 2013)."Dâm-Funk and Snoopzilla - 7 Days of Funk • Soul, Funk & World Reviews".exclaim.ca. Retrieved9 Dec 2013.
  43. ^abRew, Jessica (11 Dec 2013)."Snoop Dogg & Dam Funk - 7 Days Of Funk | Read Hip Hop Reviews, Rap Reviews & Hip Hop Album Reviews".HipHopDX.com. Archived fromthe original on 13 December 2013. Retrieved11 Dec 2013.
  44. ^Caramanica, Jon (3 Jan 2014)."Albums by Doe B, Sevyn Streeter, Burial and 7 Days of Funk".NYTimes.com. Retrieved30 Jan 2014.
  45. ^abPatrin, Nate (9 Dec 2013)."7 Days of Funk 7 Days of Funk | Album Reviews".Pitchfork.com. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  46. ^abPowell, Mike (10 Dec 2013)."'7 Days of Funk' Album Review | Album Reviews".RollingStone.com. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  47. ^abWoodruff, Chase (10 Dec 2013)."7 Days of Funk: 7 Days of Funk | Music Review".SlantMagazine.com. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  48. ^abBeta, Andy (9 Dec 2013)."Snoop Dogg and Dam-Funk Take the Ol' Mothership for a Lazy Spin on '7 Days of Funk'".Spin.com. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  49. ^abUzosike, Chisom (12 Dec 2013)."Snoop Dogg & Dâm-Funk Pay Homage To The Greats In '7 Days Of Funk'".XXL.com. Retrieved12 Dec 2013.
  50. ^Hebblethwaite, Phil (13 Dec 2013)."NME Album Reviews - 7 Days Of Funk - '7 Days Of Funk'".NME.com. Retrieved24 Dec 2013.
  51. ^Heaton, Dave (12 Dec 2013)."7 Days of Funk: 7 Days of Funk".PopMatter.com. Retrieved13 Dec 2013.
  52. ^Josephs, Brian (12 Dec 2013)."Album Reviews: 7 Days of Funk – 7 Days of Funk".Consequence.net. Retrieved12 Dec 2013.
  53. ^"iTunes - Music - 7 Days of Funk by 7 Days of Funk".iTunes. Archived fromthe original on September 30, 2015. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  54. ^"7 Days of Funk | 7 Days of Funk (45 Box Set) | Stones Throw Records". StonesThrow.com. 7 Oct 2013. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  55. ^"7 Days of Funk - 7 Days of Funk | Credits".AllMusic.com. 10 Dec 2013. Retrieved10 Dec 2013.
  56. ^Billboard issue dated December 28, 2013:
  57. ^"7 Days of Funk - Chart history | Independent Albums".Billboard.com. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved29 Dec 2013.
  58. ^"7 Days of Funk - Chart history | Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums".Billboard.com. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved29 Dec 2013.
  59. ^"7 Days of Funk - Chart history | Rap Albums".Billboard.com. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved29 Dec 2013.
  60. ^"7 Days of Funk - Chart history | Heatseekers Albums".Billboard.com. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved29 Dec 2013.
  61. ^"7 Days of Funk - Chart history | Tastemaker Albums".Billboard.com. Prometheus Global Media. Retrieved29 Dec 2013.
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