It's June 05, 2024, 01:34:10 AM
Wasn't there something about how Doggystyle wasn't actually done (at least not to Dr. Dre's liking for a completed product), but then Death Row had a deadline and had to submit whatever they had? It came out great anyway, so it's interesting to think what it would have been like if Dre finished everything, whether it was something as minor as mixing or maybe recording some different songs.
here is my Doggystyle fact this forum is the only place where Doggystyle gets talked about every month since the beginning of this forum
Quote from: DeeezNuuuts83 on February 27, 2014, 10:17:34 PMWasn't there something about how Doggystyle wasn't actually done (at least not to Dr. Dre's liking for a completed product), but then Death Row had a deadline and had to submit whatever they had? It came out great anyway, so it's interesting to think what it would have been like if Dre finished everything, whether it was something as minor as mixing or maybe recording some different songs.I remember reading that too. Supposedly Interscope gave them a now or never so Dre took all the records they had, mixed them, then threw in some hooks to fill in the blanks. Meaning Dre was taking his sweet precious time even back in 93 lolThey should've released a Doggystyle 2 EP just to really stretch Snoop's success. An EP with Doggystyle, Every Single Day, The Next Episode, etc
I remember reading that too. Supposedly Interscope gave them a now or never so Dre took all the records they had, mixed them, then threw in some hooks to fill in the blanks. Meaning Dre was taking his sweet precious time even back in 93 lolThey should've released a Doggystyle 2 EP just to really stretch Snoop's success. An EP with Doggystyle, Every Single Day, The Next Episode, etc
Bad idea. Death Row was not No Limit Records. Death Row was quality over quantity. They kept people wanting more. In fact the main reason Dre left Death Row was because they started signing artists without his approval and he wanted to maintain a high standard for any artist or album released on Death Row.
Now we are in the days of mixtapes where artists like kendrick have a 1,000 songs floating around and Snoop does songs with the Pussycat Dolls and it certainly waters everything down.
Bad idea. Death Row was not No Limit Records. Death Row was quality over quantity. They kept people wanting more. In fact the main reason Dre left Death Row was because they started signing artists without his approval and he wanted to maintain a high standard for any artist or album released on Death Row.Now we are in the days of mixtapes where artists like kendrick have a 1,000 songs floating around and Snoop does songs with the Pussycat Dolls and it certainly waters everything down.
http://www.hiphopdx.com/index/interviews/id.2120/title.kurupt-opens-up-about-foxy-brown-relationship-reconciling-with-dmx
I also remember Snoop saying that "every single day" was made during the Chronic sessions but was intended to be his first single for Doggy STyle. obviously never happened. can't find that interview at the moment though.
Quote from: Tanaka Power on February 27, 2014, 09:50:21 PMI also remember Snoop saying that "every single day" was made during the Chronic sessions but was intended to be his first single for Doggy STyle. obviously never happened. can't find that interview at the moment though.Colby Colb show from 1994 where they play Every Single Dayhttp://uploading.com/f5191a48/SNOOP-DOGG-Interview-On-Philly-s-Power-99-Radioactive-Radio-Show-With-Colby-Colb-4-22-1994-mp3