Ice Cube Is, Rollin’ At Twilight, In Visually Cinematic Eye-Opening New Video

Today marks exactly two months since legendary Westcoast Hip-Hop pioneer and icon Ice Cube released his critically-acclaimed and highly-anticipated latest solo album, Man Down. With the album still in pretty heavy rotation from me and I am sure many others, The Don Mega returns today with the brand new Gabriel “VIDEOGOD” Hart-directed video for one of the album’s most standout tracks that also happens to be the opening track, Rollin’ At Twilight.

Debuted earlier today through Vevo. The cinematic new video opens with a plane flying by the sunset of California. Then showing the highway before in special effects a fancy car starts speeding by with Ice Cube riding in it and going past La Brea drive where he stops and sparks up a joint as he picks up his longtime fellow Westcoast legend and partner in rhyme, WC. His tires having both Man Down and Rollin’ At Twilight indebted as promotion on them. Ice Cube and WC riding around the city in the twilight as Cube spits his stellar real rhymes such as, “Why the real ones gotta pass? Missing you everyday. Repeat all the sh^* that you used to say. Ran across your picture in my iPhone. Boy you was wild as a cyclone. Kind of like me with the mic on. Grab the sh^* tight like a python.” Elsewhere Ice Cube, WC and one or two other homies sitting at a table in a parking lot playing cards. The video then transitioning to Cube and B-Real of Cypress Hill with two cups of liquor cheering to each other on a mountain top with a view of Los Angeles in the distance. Right before it goes to the car speeding around in a circle to drive off real fast with Ice Cube and B-Real now riding together down the L.A. streets in the twilight of night while rapping their catchy verses from their Westcoast banger collaboration, Let’s Get Money Together that is also from Cube’s recent album.

The special effects that director “VIDEOGOD” is able to get for the visuals along with the actual footage he shot. Giving a real classic 90’s or early 2000’s Hip-Hop vibes. That really helps bring the energy and realness of the lyrics from both tracks even more to life.