Description: Label: Ruffhouse Records
Producer: DJ Muggs
Released: 1996
Released by DJ MUGGS for Soul Assassins.
"Ice Cube Killa" has never been released officially.
This track disses Ice Cube and Westside Connection, and THIS IS NOT ICE Cube on the track.
Cypress got hold of a rapper that sounded exactly like Cube to rap on the track so it sounds like Cube is dissing himself on the track, when in reality it is a completely different rapper
Rumours exist that the beef between these two power factors from the westcoast started when B-Real played a demo of the Cypress Hill album “Temples of boom” to Ice Cube. According to B-Real Ice Cube took the hook from the track “Throw Your Set In The Air" and used it in the track "Friday" from the soundtrack under the same name. Cypress Hill started this lyrical warfare with the track “No rest for the wicked” from the final and remastered version of “Temples of boom”, dissing Ice Cube on more than one level.
"I got Cube melting in a Tray, Pulling up his card & fucking up his good day!”.
Soon after “Temples of boom” was released Ice Cube recorded a diss back with his partners WC and Mack 10 (Westside Connection) on the group’s first album “Bow Down". On the track “King of the hill” Ice Cube teams up with Mack 10 and disses Cypress Hill as a direct reaction to the track “No rest for the wicked”. "King of the hill" was not the only diss track towards Cypress Hill on the album, on the track “cross em out and put a k” busts WSC.
When Cypress hill heard that Mack 10 had joined up with Ice Cube it caused more heat to the now ongoing beef. Cypress Hill didn’t take long to respond with the track “Ice Cube Killa”, alternatively named ”Fuck Westside connection” which is an unreleased track with the same beat as WSC track "king of the hill", this is how this track was created.