Fuck the Police "
Fuck the Police" was released on
12-inch vinyl on September 18, 2001. The track is built upon a sample of René Costy & His Orchestra's 1972 track "Scrabble", from which the
drum break and violin sample are taken from. The label seemingly did not want to receive any ominous, unsolicited letters from the
FBI. Both the vocal and instrumental are sourced directly from mix-downs that J Dilla himself created.
The Anthem On February 11, 2013, "The Anthem", featuring
Detroit rap duo
Frank n Dank, was made available to stream on Rappcats'
SoundCloud. It was made purchasable at Rappcats.com on 12-inch vinyl on April 15, 2013, packaged with
B-side "Trucks" – Dilla's take on
Gary Numan's
new wave classic, "
Cars" – which was previously leaked as an unmixed, unmastered MP3. Both tracks were produced, and feature complete vocal performances, by J Dilla. They were finished by engineer Dave Cooley, who worked extensively with Dilla during his years in
Los Angeles. That version, entitled "We F'd Up", was revealed through the
Pay Jay leak. In 2008, Kanye West disclosed, on his now defunct
blog, that he had "[n]ever heard this song till now". "I made this beat in 2001, of course right after '
Takeover'," he wrote. "[W]e were [having] problems clearing the
Doors sample so I made this version originally [for] Big Bro Hov." In the end however, Dilla produced the song himself as "The Anthem" which is the entire opposite of the leaked version. It serves as the second single and was released on August 27, 2013, with B-side "Ice" in the form of a 7-track 12-inch EP called
Diamonds & Ice. Recorded and mixed by Dilla between February and April 2002, the EP includes two tracks that are perhaps two of the best known pieces from the album – the first one was leaked years ago in a low quality
unmastered format, and the other was released as a
Jaylib-era short-lived
promotional single. Long before the release of his
posthumous album,
The Shining (2006), J Dilla titled these two tracks "The Shining Pt. 1", and "The Shining Pt. 2". "Diamonds (The Shining Pt. 1)" was produced by
Nottz, while "Ice (The Shining Pt. 2)" was produced by
Madlib, who Dilla would later collaborate with under the group name Jaylib. The
Diamonds & Ice EP features both final and alternate mixes of each tracks along with the instrumental and two markedly different versions of "Ice", with one showing the musical direction Dilla would embark on after
The Diary was shelved in 2002. Completing this EP is a Madlib instrumental that J Dilla secured for the album but never turned into the final song, entitled "The D".
Give Them What They Want On May 20, 2014, Pay Jay Productions released one last EP titled
Give Them What They Want on a 12-inch clear vinyl. It is a five-track EP featuring three vocal tracks recorded and mixed by Dilla between September and December 2001, as well as two instrumentals. The first two vocal tracks on this record are built around the same lyrics – the title track produced by Dilla and "The Doe" produced by Supa Dave West. The last vocal track "So Far", also produced by West, is familiar to some fans of MP3 bootlegs. On this record, it is mastered for the first time by Dave Cooley. On April 16, 2014, the titular lead "Give Them What They Want" was made available to stream via Rappcats' SoundCloud page.
The Introduction The album opener, "The Introduction", was broadcast on Zane Lowe's radio show on February 18, 2016. On the same date, the
House Shoes produced-song was published on SoundCloud by Mass Appeal and was made purchasable on iTunes. A day after its release, Eric Torres of
Pitchfork gave the song a "Best New Track" designation, writing that "Though it's his idiosyncratic production that earned him his legacy, Dilla was a clear force behind the mic, too."
Gangsta Boogie Before
The Diary was unearthed in full, a previously unreleased track titled "Gangsta Boogie" was premiered on
Dr. Dre's
Beats 1 radio show
The Pharmacy on April 2, 2016. The same night, it was published on Mass Appeal's SoundCloud and was made purchasable on iTunes. Produced by
Hi-Tek, the track features
Kokane and
Snoop Dogg, whose vocals were recorded after Dilla had passed during the making of the album. In a February 2012 interview with
Complex,
Stones Throw Records founder
Peanut Butter Wolf first spoke about the then unfinished piece on which J Dilla gave a shout out to Snoop Dogg. He revealed that Dilla intended to have the rap veteran on the track, but the collaboration had not come to fruition before the former's death. During a brief
sit-down with Mass Appeal in 2016, Snoop Dogg disclosed that he "never had a chance to work with him personally." "He was making hot music around the same time I was making hot music, and I was just hearing about him and wanted to get with him," he continued. "[W]hen he passed away I reached out to his people, and wanted them to know that I definitely wanted to work with him." It was the album's only single with a music video. ==Track listing==