West Coast Connection Forum
DUBCC - Tha Connection => West Coast Classics => Topic started by: TraceOneInfinite on April 20, 2026, 06:01:55 PM
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I thought the songs "Rat-tat-tat-tat" and "Nicca Wit A Gun" were real back in 1993. So, I thought Dre was an even bigger gangsta than Snoop Dogg. You all add to my list, but I'm going to title this:
FUNNY THINGS YOU THOUGHT BACK WHEN YOU FIRST HEARD RAP:
-- I thought Snoop and Dre were a rap group like EPMD. When "Let Me Ride" came out I was confused why Snoop only had one line. And when "Who Am I" came out I was confused why Dre only had one line.
-- That when Dre rapped on Chronic "I sit back relax/ do a job / then jet" I took it literally that he was really a killer and came out of the alley, shot people, and then went back into hiding. I didn't know he was 50/50 owner of a record label and just a producer that didn't write his lyrics.
-- That Snoop was actually a good guy and didn't smoke weed, and just lied and said he did for publicity (cause we thought drugs were bad D.A.R.E. program told us smoking weed causes brain damage
-- I thought the "Today Was a Good Day" video was a documentary. I really thought Cube lived that life everyday in 93' just like the music video.
-- I thought that Daz and Kurupt were just like gangstaz who Snoop hung out with in the alleys in the hood like the "Who Am I" video. I didn't even think of them as rappers, just like as if Snoop was letting his homiez rap on tracks as a way of "giving back to the hood".
-- I thought the Dogg Pound was Snoop's group and the reason Snoop's sound had changed on "Big Pimpin" was because he was rich now from Doggystyle so he wasn't making any angry/aggressive music anymore he was just Pimpin Hoes. And I didn't even know what a Pimp actually did I thought a Pimp was just a guy who slept with a lot of girls, and in school if you had been lucky enough to kiss multiple girls (going to first base) your classmates would call you a pimp' in 93
-- I thought Snoop was actually rapping on "Recognize". I told my friend when G Funk Era first came out--"The best song is the Snoop song Recognize". I didn't know it was just a sample. I knew it was the same line from "Doggy Dogg World" but I thought he was actually rapping it in the studio with Warren G and helped Warren with the beat and the song.
-- I thought the Chronic had less liner notes than Doggystyle because Dre wasn't as creative as Snoop because he was just more into killing people, and Snoop was more of a humanitarian
-- I thought Snoop was really shy in the "Dre Day" video because he was just like some dude from the streets and didn't really care that much about rapping, that he would rather just be out hanging in back alleys and digging out of trash cans like Heithcliff the cartoon cat
-- I thought that the "Doggy Dogg World" video was like some old video from like before Snoop was famous, but I was really confused cause the song was also on Doggystyle.
-- I was scared to listen to NWA on the back of the bus in 5th grade because it had the N-word in their name so I didn't listen. I also didn't buy 2pac's album in 6th grade because it said it was Strictly for blacks, lol
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i thought dr dre concrete roots was a real album when i saw it at tower records and bought it
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i thought dr dre concrete roots was a real album when i saw it at tower records and bought it
Dude, I was even more dumb than that...
...I loved the Chronic and Doggystyle so much that the obvious next step was to go the store and see if they were on any other albums. This was before Above the Rim had came out so there were no other Death Row releases. The obvious move would've been to buy Efil4zaggin and then I would have hit the jackpot. It would have had the Dr. Dre and Death Row sound I was looking for and it was his most recent album before Chronic.
...but instead, like a retard I didn't put it together about NWA and Dre even though I'm sure I had to have heard that Dre was in NWA before Death Row, but it didn't click. All those years I was desperate for more Death Row music and didn't even get around to Efil4Zaggin until like 8 years later in 2001, smh
...so I bought Concrete Roots back in 94', SMH. Though "Brenda" by DOC was a hidden gem on there, friends used to come over just to listen to that track
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Dude, I was even more dumb than that...
...I loved the Chronic and Doggystyle so much that the obvious next step was to go the store and see if they were on any other albums. This was before Above the Rim had came out so there were no other Death Row releases. The obvious move would've been to buy Efil4zaggin and then I would have hit the jackpot. It would have had the Dr. Dre and Death Row sound I was looking for and it was his most recent album before Chronic.
...but instead, like a retard I didn't put it together about NWA and Dre even though I'm sure I had to have heard that Dre was in NWA before Death Row, but it didn't click. All those years I was desperate for more Death Row music and didn't even get around to Efil4Zaggin until like 8 years later in 2001, smh
...so I bought Concrete Roots back in 94', SMH. Though "Brenda" by DOC was a hidden gem on there, friends used to come over just to listen to that track
you're talkin about "bridgette" on first round knockout
classic track
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When i heard N.W.A., i did not know what Dre looked like.
So watching Yo MTV Raps for the first time, the DJ on it was Doctor Dre and i was like this guy dont look, act or sound anything like on the records :grumpy:
(https://media.gettyimages.com/id/2148653050/photo/new-york-new-york-november-01-yo-mtv-raps-host-and-hot-97-radio-dj-doctor-dre-appears-in-a.jpg?s=612x612&w=gi&k=20&c=IMx1igYgjtKLp1E6tY0bs3p6Luh9jDCJeLQ_1JCmWwo=)
Dr Dre legendary West-Coast producer and N.W.A member
When the G-Thang video came out, then it made sense ;D
Yew, i think a lot of people got duped into buying Concrete Roots and ended up listening to Wreckin Crew in 94 when they were expecting Chronic G-Funk shit.
Alonso and Triple XXX Records was on some slick shit, got payed of Dre's name and fucked with his rep.
Trouser Press wrote: "With the exception of Michel'le's smooth kiss-off 'No More Lies,' the mostly sub-B-side cuts are a weak mix of filler and watered-down, post-disco rap from Dre and Yella's pre-N.W.A outfit, the oft-ridiculed and ridiculously attired World Class Wreckin' Cru'."
Vibe gave the compilation a mixed review, writing that it puts Dre's early work in "proper context" and "historical perspective." It also praised the D.O.C.'s contributions.
There was another two tapes in 96, Dre and Jimmy sued -
In 1996, Dr. Dre and Interscope Records sued Triple X Records to remove an album of early Dre material titled First Round Knock Out from the marketplace.
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you're talkin about "bridgette" on first round knockout
classic track
Yea you're right I got mixed up
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"Bridgette"
In an interview with DubCNN the DOC said that this was a leftover from No One Can Do It Better, and, sadly enough, the only leftover.
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didn't even get around to Efil4Zaggin until like 8 years later in 2001
That was well late, that album was a major event at it's time just like The Chronic and Doggystyle afterwads.
If it had been released in 2001 it would of been the best album of that year, the sonics on that album will never date.
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I thought the same about NWA that they were real gangstas...me and my friends bought Raiders gear and wore it for a bit around Queens in ‘91 lol...I didn't really hear the album till the year after though...pretty much what got me into hip-hop
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"Bridgette"
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That was well late, that album was a major event at it's time just like The Chronic and Doggystyle afterwads.
If it had been released in 2001 it would of been the best album of that year, the sonics on that album will never date.
Yeah, I can't believe it took me till 01' to get Efil4zaggin but you got to remember the 90's were the days when you actually had to go out and buy albums to hear them. Also, in the 90's there was so much new shit coming out that was hott so we were always looking for the next thing. By 99 I started going back and getting old albums I missed like Xzibit's first 2 albums I bought when "Bitch Please" came out, and I bought Illmatic in 99'.
But yeah it's still insane to think I was that big of a Dre fanatic (I had the Aftermath Presents poster on my wall and was following his every move even in the down period of 97-98) and never actually bought or listened through Efil4Zaggin until 2001
All that time I was waiting for King Tee Thy Kingdom Come to never be released I could have just bought Efil4Zaggin to fill the void
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Yeah, I can't believe it took me till 01' to get Efil4zaggin but you got to remember the 90's were the days when you actually had to go out and buy albums to hear them. Also, in the 90's there was so much new shit coming out that was hott so we were always looking for the next thing. By 99 I started going back and getting old albums I missed like Xzibit's first 2 albums I bought when "Bitch Please" came out, and I bought Illmatic in 99'.
But yeah it's still insane to think I was that big of a Dre fanatic (I had the Aftermath Presents poster on my wall and was following his every move even in the down period of 97-98) and never actually bought or listened through Efil4Zaggin until 2001
All that time I was waiting for King Tee Thy Kingdom Come to never be released I could have just bought Efil4Zaggin to fill the void
when did you get to nwa & the posse, straight outa compton, and 100 miles & runnin?
and did you ever get into mc ren eazy-e and ice cube solos? i rarely hear u talkin bout that
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when did you get to nwa & the posse, straight outa compton, and 100 miles & runnin?
and did you ever get into mc ren eazy-e and ice cube solos? i rarely hear u talkin bout that
Same time I bought Efil4Zaggin I was so hype after listening to it of course I went out and copped St8 outa Compton and 100 Miles and Runnin'.
I tried to get into the Ren solos probably before that I think I gave them a chance, they were alright
Eazy man I'm an idiot man I still have never given them a proper listen I've skimmed through them and bumped joints here and there and all sounded dope
Cube.. definitely, I mean I've had most all of Cubes platinum albums and a big fan of all of his singles—I'd even get into some album cuts like "Ask About Me" and "Down 4 Whatever" I was a big fan of "Down 4 Whatever" in 7th grade it was the B Side of the "Bop Gun" single which blew my mind when that video dropped, I basically met my best friend for jr high on the strength of us both being fans of it
I guess I just never would play the cube albums thru I would just go to certain cuts on the album
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Same time I bought Efil4Zaggin I was so hype after listening to it of course I went out and copped St8 outa Compton and 100 Miles and Runnin'.
I tried to get into the Ren solos probably before that I think I gave them a chance, they were alright
Eazy man I'm an idiot man I still have never given them a proper listen I've skimmed through them and bumped joints here and there and all sounded dope
Cube.. definitely, I mean I've had most all of Cubes platinum albums and a big fan of all of his singles—I'd even get into some album cuts like "Ask About Me" and "Down 4 Whatever" I was a big fan of "Down 4 Whatever" in 7th grade it was the B Side of the "Bop Gun" single which blew my mind when that video dropped, I basically met my best friend for jr high on the strength of us both being fans of it
I guess I just never would play the cube albums thru I would just go to certain cuts on the album
deezamn @ never peepin an eazy-e solo
:thefuck:
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Some peeps thought 2Pac & Makavelli were two different people :grumpy:
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I thought Shock Gs brother was Humpty Hump...then I found out it was his alter ego...and then I found out that he indeed had a brother...I'm still not sure who was playing Humpty in the Humpty Dance video
RIP Shock G
https://www.instagram.com/p/DSQjclVE6BX/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link
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Some peeps thought 2Pac & Makavelli were two different people :grumpy:
And then there's people who call him 2Pack when they pronounce his name
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I thought Dre was a real doctor before he made music.
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Well he did dress like one.
This thread reminds me of -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fbt9-KijtQs
;D
Here's an interview by Dre in 2000 -
The Rap Trap
(https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/061e6db6fb4c3fce76b5cd6e04f5b517e43d7147/0_118_2040_1224/master/2040.jpg?width=445&dpr=1&s=none&crop=none)
Dr Dre helped pioneer hardcore hip-hop: violence against bitches, the love of guns and fast cars. Now a millionaire father-of-two, he says hes turned over a new leaf all that gangsta stuff was just about marketing, pleasing the fans. So who is the Dre of today? And has he really managed to break free from his past?
Im on my way to meet Dr Dre, and I have a song in my head. Its called Fuck You, and in it Dre explains, in some detail, how he just wants to fuck bad bitches. The streets of Los Angeles glare white in the midday sun. I struggle into the plush recording studio where Dre is working. We talk for a while about his latest album, Dr Dre 2001.
He recorded it, he tells me, because he felt misunderstood. People definitely had the wrong idea about me. A lot of people were saying I was a mean cat, I disrespected women, a lotta bullshit, a lotta nonsense.
Can you blame them, I suggest, given your history of violence, an arrest record that makes for long, grim reading and a six-month prison sentence for parole violation. He reflects for a moment. Of course I cant blame them, but Im a different person today. I cant blame them, and thats why I wanted to do this album and present myself in a new light the Dre of today.
For the record, then, the Dre of today is a relaxed, good-humoured, 35-year-old husband and father of two. He would like very much to put the misdemeanours of youth behind him, and make songs that highlight his maturity and sensitivity. Songs such as Fuck You. Strangely, there is less contradiction here than might seem apparent.
It was while serving a six-month sentence in a Pasadena jail that Dre realised hed had enough of hardcore hip-hop. As a producer and performer, he helped create the violent, invective-filled genre of gangsta rap, selling around 40 million records in the process. But along the way amid the parties and women and fast cars that also came with being Dr Dre hed lost touch with himself, Andre Young. And he was tired. I just said, let me do a whole 180 with my life. I dont want to do any more negative hip-hop music, I cant be talking about bitches and hos.
After prison, he got married and recorded a compilation album, Dr Dre Presents . . . The Aftermath, by unknown artists and producers. His contribution was a single track, Been There, Done That. In the wake of his jailhouse conversion, he now mocked rappers who talk that hardcore shit coz thats all they worth. The album promised much. A fresh start for Dre and a career launch for the artists involved. It delivered neither. By commercial standards, the record sold acceptably. By Dres measure, it was a woeful failure. People were expecting 7-Up and they got water, he conceded. I wasnt getting compliments from my fans. Rap critics began to suggest hed lost his edge. He felt directionless and insecure. Finally, his wife gave him some advice. She used to play my music before we even met, so she was like, You need to get back in there and get back on that hardcore shit. It felt funny going in the studio talking about this bitch and this ho and how I fucked this girl with a wife at home. But then, I have to look at it like entertainment, and I have a set fanbase, and theres certain things they want to hear. They wanna hear Dre be Dre.
So Dr Dre 2001 delivers a well-established formula of hardcore rap to its audience. There are songs that fetishise guns and objectify women. Songs that celebrate marijuana use and low-rider cars. Despite this, its not simply a return to Dres gangsta past. Its a more complex, reflective album. Where most hardcore rap affects a stony-faced emotional detachment, 2001 is at its strongest when Dre shows himself to be vulnerable. Real gangstas dont cry, he states on one song, if thats the truth then Im realising I aint no gangsta. This is most notably so on The Message, a ballad that features the plaintive vocals of R&B queen Mary J Blige and on which Dre mourns the death of his younger brother, Tyree, whose neck was broken in a fight three years ago.
Back in the day, I would never have made a song about my brother, but it was a very big part of my life, so I finally decided to give people that much more of me. Having tried unsuccessfully to divorce himself from what Dr Dre was, it seems he has chosen instead to broaden the possibilities of who Dr Dre can be. So much so that he gives me an indignant look when I refer to him as a gangsta rap artist, complaining that he doesnt even know where the term gangsta rap came from. I think the media invented it. We never came out and said, Yo, what we do is gangsta rap. What I make is hardcore hip-hop.
Its easy to see why he insists on the distinction. Creatively, the music form never progressed far beyond an adolescent glee at its own ability to shock. Yet its ironic, too. Because, as part of the rap group NWA, Dre helped create gangsta rap and watched its impact spread across the globe. And, as a consequence of that breakthrough, he became lauded as the finest producer in rap. Newsweek called him the Phil Spector of hip-hop, and he won a Grammy award after his first solo album, The Chronic.
But the timbre of our conversation has changed. Dre is progressively less relaxed the more we talk about those years of high acclaim. His broad 6ft 2in frame folds into itself, his knee bobs up and down nervily. Finally, it occurs to me that what hes uncomfortable about has nothing to do with music. Rather, hes edgy about where his success led. And how money and fame threatened to consume him as thoroughly, and fatally, as it did to so many of those around him.
In the 60s, before it became famous through an NWA record, Compton was regarded as a neighbourhood of hope. With the phasing out of the citys racist housing policies, black families fled the ghettos of Watts and headed en masse for Comptons palm-tree-lined streets. Today, it has become a battleground in the vicious feud between LAs two main black street gangs, the Bloods and the Crips. It was Andre Youngs love of music that kept him out of trouble in the neighbourhood. The last of his divorced mothers three children, he was playing records from her extensive collection from as early as three years old. Id put on a record at my mothers card parties, and people would scream out or get up and dance. I just loved stirring people up.
During high school, he deejayed at parties and clubs, and won a college scholarship to study mechanical drawing. Instead, though, he left school at 16 to join one of LAs earliest rap groups, the World Class Wreckin Kru. It was an inauspicious start to his career. Inspired by the extravagant stage-gear of acts such as Parliament and Earth Wind & Fire, the group wore flamboyant costumes that brought together the previously unconnected fields of hip-hop and high camp. Spandex jumpsuits, lace ruffs, off-the-shoulder capes and mascara featured heavily. Dre skulked at the back wearing eyeliner and, in a weak pun on his name, a surgeons gown and mask. He was determined that his next group would use rap as a vehicle for reality, not fantasy.
Indeed, at the height of their notoriety, when the FBI was calling for their heads and police forces went on alert in advance of the groups arrival in their town, NWA had a simple response to criticism: they were just reporters, telling the facts as they saw them. It was a seductive argument. But reportage follows principles of objectivity. And Niggaz With Attitude, the five-piece Dre founded with Eric Eazy-E Wright and O Shea Ice Cube Jackson in 1986 were anything but dispassionate in their work.
In the mid-80s, hip-hop was dominated by sober New York-based rap groups such as Public Enemy, the standard bearers for a black nationalist agenda subscribed to, at least in name, by most acts on the East Coast. Over on the West Coast, NWA had other ideas. Instead of Malcolm X or the Nation Of Islam, they turned for inspiration to the ghetto fiction of pimp-turned-novelist Iceberg Slim and the bawdy humour of Richard Pryor, Dolemite and Red Foxx. Like them, the group spun tales from the less salubrious aspects of black life. They rapped about drug deals gone wrong and drive-by shootings, gang warfare and police confrontations, grasping, materialist women (hos) and unfaithful lovers (bitches), all of which was set to an exhilarating, cinematic soundtrack produced by Dre. And they were delighted when the moral panic stirred by their debut album, Straight Outta Compton, released on Eazy-Es Ruthless records in 1988, turned them into the most famous, and infamous, rappers in America.
Outraged by songs such as Fuck Tha Police, politicians, civic leaders and, most spectacularly, the FBI accused the group of glorifying violence to sell records. Ultimately, however, NWAs success was based on their shrewd understanding of modern media. Courting notoriety meant that they could bypass both radio and MTV, which anyway refused to play them. Instead, newspaper headlines, debates on CNN and Home Office raids on their record companyÕs UK HQ brought them worldwide attention.
After we started getting flak from FBI agents and people of that nature, we said, Okay, were going to really fuck with you now, says Dre gleefully. So we started making the music even heavier. The strategy worked. Straight Outta Compton went gold in six weeks (600,000 record sales) then platinum (one million record sales), and after that double platinum. Niggaz 4 Life, the follow-up, went straight to number one in the US charts. Barely out of his teens, Dre was rich and famous. It was the start of his troubles.
Estranged from Eazy-Es Ruthless label following a dispute over management and finances, Dre began work on The Chronic, the solo album that would come to consolidate his reputation at the forefront of hip-hop. As in-house producer at Ruthless, he had already been responsible for a string of million-selling albums. In return, he rewarded himself with a lavish lifestyle that included an enormous French colonial-style house, numerous high-grade sports cars and a ceaseless round of parties. My house was full of people all the time. You could come over on Sunday morning and theres just people laying out on the floor asleep. Girls all over the place. I was spending money on a lot of cars, jewellery, apartments all over town. I probably bought somewhere between eight to 10 cars. Ferraris, I dont know how many Mercedes, Corvettes . . . it was just dumb shit. I blew a lot of money. I was letting people in my life that were straight up there totally to see what they can get out of my pocket, and I wasnt seeing this. It was just about the party to me, and you gotta have people around to have a party.
Insulated from criticism by his retinue of hangers-on, and with a reputation as a hardcore rapper to maintain, Dre began reacting to criticism with sudden, petulant rage. At a music-industry party in 1991, he attacked TV show host Dee Barnes after an uncomplimentary report about NWA had aired on her programme. Dre picks me up by my hair and my ear,Ó Barnes told the writer Ronin Ro, in his gangsta rap expose, Have Gun Will Travel. In terror, she dashed into the ladies washroom. Dre pursued her. He grabs my hair again, throws me to the front of the bathroom. I just duck down and just . . . take my ass-whipping, you know what I mean? Theres nobody helping me and theres no way in hell I could throw a punch at him. In response to the attack, Barnes filed a $20-million lawsuit, although the case was eventually settled out of court. Dre muttered to Rolling Stone, I was in the wrong, but its not like I broke the bitchs arm.
The Dee Barnes affair was only the prelude to a catalogue of misdemeanours during 1992. In June that year, Dre was fined $10,000 and placed under electronic house arrest for 90 days with a tagging device around his ankle. He had been found guilty of breaking the jaw of an aspirant rap producer, Damon Thomas. In October, he served another 30 days after pleading guilty to the battery of a police officer during a large brawl that took place in the lobby of a New Orleans hotel. Some events were beyond his control, though. He was shot in the legs after gunfire broke out at a party he was attending. And, following a raucous party of his own, the producer was forced to stand by and watch his grand house go up in flames. Wed had a party at my house the night before. We had a barbecue, and the next day the coals from the barbecue were dumped in a trash can which was pushed up against the house, says Dre. They set the house on fire. And boom, there you have it. House going up in smoke!
Post-NWA, Dre was now living the life hed once only rapped about. And it was proving too much. I was out of control, he admits. I was wildin out, partying, women . . . I think the business, and all the fame and fortune, just sucked me in and I had to step back and see that I was ruining everything that I had worked so hard at building.
Frustrated by continued wrangling with Eazy-E, Dre co-founded a new label in 1992, Death Row. Within four years, it would be worth an estimated $200 million, becoming one of the most successful black-owned labels of all time. But before then, it became clear that the company had a major liability: Death Rows other owner. Marion ÒSugeÓ Knight was a 300lb, 6ft 3in former professional footballer-turned-businessman. He was also a convicted felon with gangster connections, whom ABC television described in 1996 as Òthe most dangerous man in music. While Dre was the production brains of Death Row, Knight was its public face. At its inception, he talked of creating a label as successful and culturally important as Motown. In its early days, this didnÕt seem like an idle boast.
Death Rows first release was The Chronic. Hailed as a masterpiece by critics, it marked Dres maturing as a producer and performer. Acutely well-crafted, the album updated the sensual, oleaginous funk of George Clinton for the hip-hop era. Like Straight Outta Compton, it was also a guide to the street life of LA. Instead of NWAs menacing imagery, however, The Chronic imagined an urban Elysium of low-rider cars, poolside parties, bikini-clad girls and high-quality marijuana. True, there were an obligatory number of weapons brandished and insults hurled (although most of the latter were issued at Eazy-E), but there was also love. The album introduced the Death Row family of new artists who shared a spirit of friendly collaboration on many of its tracks. They were to be the stars of the new Motown. Chief among them was Dres protege, a tall, fine-featured rapper, whose laidback manner and hangdog expression had earned him the childhood nickname Snoopy. As Snoop Doggy Dogg, he became the labels first home-grown star, with a debut album, Doggystyle, that outsold Dres. By 1996, The Chronic and Doggystyle had earned an estimated $50 million and $63 million in retail sales, respectively.
None of this was enough for Suge Knight, though. As Death Row grew in strength, so too did his greed. Knight took to holding unconventional business meetings with rivals. To resolve Dres long-running feud with Eazy-E, he allegedly threatened the latter at gunpoint, forcing him to relinquish Ruthlesss rights to Dres work. Other record company executives shared similar tales of intimidation, and even outright assault. In 1992, Knight faced assault charges after the pistol-whipping of two brothers, George and Lynwood Stanley, in the offices of Death Row. Catching them using the office payphone, Knight beat them, ordered them to strip naked and then robbed them. They deserved their punishment, insisted the Death Row boss. He was waiting for a phone call.
A climate of terror settled over the labels Wilshire Boulevard offices. Members of the Piru Blood gang, an arm of the feared Bloods street gang that was friendly with Knight, took to hanging out there, swapping prison stories and shaking down staff for cash. They were also there to mete out summary justice on behalf of Knight. Subtitled The Spectacular Rise And Violent Fall Of Death Row Records, Ronin Ros Have Gun Will Travel describes, in gory detail, the disorder that reigned there: If Suge felt someone was trying to cheat him, the offender would be dragged into a storeroom by his goons and pounded to a bloody pulp. Death Row employees went about their filing and faxing as blood-curdling shrieks filled the office. They saw the doorknob jerking, knowing that people were desperately trying to escape a beating, thinking, IÕm trying to get out this motherfucking room that they done locked this door on!
The chaos within Death Row seemed indicative of deeper stresses in the hardcore hip-hop world. Gangsta rap was reaching critical mass. The once close-knit Death Row family fell into rivalrous camps. It became, What kinda car does this person have. I gotta get a better car than that; My house has to look better than this persons house, says Dre. When the money started coming into play from Death Row, thatÕs when the problems just went haywire.
Worse followed. In 1995, the notoriously promiscuous Eazy-E died after contracting Aids. In 1996, Snoop Doggy Dogg stood trial for murder. He was acquitted. But that same year, Tupac Shakur, a recent signing to Death Row and one of raps brightest stars, was killed in a drive-by shooting. Sitting beside him in the same car, Suge Knight escaped largely unhurt. There was speculation that the shots were never intended for Shakur, but rather Knight. Two weeks later, the Death Row boss was behind bars after being caught on security camera taking part in the group beating of a member of the Crips street gang, sworn enemies of Knights associates, the Bloods. A serial offender with eight previous convictions, he had violated the terms of his probation received for assaulting the Stanley brothers. Knight was sentenced to nine years in jail. The FBI, IRS, DEA and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms immediately began joint investigations into Death Row on possible racketeering charges related to Knights alleged business links with the drug-dealing Piru Blood gang. Death Rows grand dreams had melted into air.
In the beginning, it was all about Niggers coming up, commented Dre in the hip-hop magazine Blaze. Then it turned into a fucking Don Corleone thing. It was like a movie. You come into his [Knights] office and cant step on the carpets Death Row emblem and all that crazy shit. It didnt need to escalate like that . . . I got tired of seeing engineers get they ass beat for rewinding a tape too far.
Dre says he decided to leave Death Row after going to jail. Arrested on a drunk-driving charge, he was found guilty of violating the parole he received for breaking Damon Thomass jaw. ÒTo be honest, prison was probably the best thing that could have happened to me in my life, he says earnestly. Everything was happening so fast, the success I was having, all the money coming in, all the girls, all the partying. I never had a chance to say, Yo, what do I want my life to hold? I had to find myself. And it was crazy. I saw a confused individual. A guy that wasnt sure what he really wanted out of life. It made me say, Yo, man, fuck those streets, fuck everything thats going on out there on those streets. Is this the life I wanna lead, or do I wanna be a businessman, be able to take care of my family, chill out, have fun and make money while Im sleeping?
Dre now lives with his wife, Nicole, and their two young sons on a $4.9-million estate in a gated community in the San Fernando Valley. He abandoned his stake in Death Row while it was still a force in the music industry, trading income for peace of mind. Ultimately, he believes his real talent lies in producing, directing and scoring films. He has already written a screenplay based on his own life, called Please Listen To My Demo. Yet although hes now a 20-year veteran of the music business, his career is far from over. In fact, its just enjoying its third swell.
In 1996, Dre started his own label, Aftermath, backed by Interscope records, part of the entertainment conglomerate, Universal. Aftermaths contract is due for renogotiation, and industry observers predict that it will net Dre a nine-figure sum. Following the disappointment of its first release, Dr Dre Presents . . . The Aftermath, the label is now thriving. Dr Dre 2001 has sold five million copies since November 1999 and, in 26-year-old white rapper Eminem, it also has a major new star. A skilled, darkly-comic performer from Detroit (born Marshall Mathers), Eminems records have sparked controversy for their warped reflections on sex, drugs and teen life. The response is an echo of the furore that surrounded NWA more than a decade earlier. Dre, who produced the rapperÕs debut album, The Slim Shady LP, is amused. ItÕs easy to see why.
In the years since Straight Outta Compton, real life, with its celebrity scandals and high-school shoot-outs, has worked hard to outgun even the most lurid fantasies of hardcore rap. Entertainment culture has responded by becoming more provocative and more sexualised, from Reservoir Dogs and Boogie Nights in the US to Gail Porters bare bottom projected on to the House of Commons in Britain. Under the circumstances, its difficult to argue that hardcore hip-hop, in particular, deserves to be excoriated. But it does raise a question. NWA are currently in the studio, recording a comeback album called Not These Niggaz Again, with Snoop Dogg replacing the late Eazy-E. But just what is there left for them to rebel against? I know people are gonna be, like, ÔNWA started this whole genre of hardcore hip-hop or gangsta rap music Ñ what else are they gonna talk about? nods Dre. But once we deliver the record and its hot, and its a record that you can buy and bump and just roll out and wild out to, what the album is about wont matter. Besides, he counters, I dont think its easy to sell records when youre just trying to shock and inflame. Its been done a thousand times after NWA came, and nobodys reached the success that we had.
Perhaps Dres real art is not in shock, then, but seduction. Like his heroes, Pryor, Iceberg Slim, Tarantino and Scorsese, he has remade the brute antagonisms of street life as beautiful, dissonant poetry. While critics of hardcore rap have concentrated on its lyrics, Dre has been more concerned with what it should feel like; with how it bumps and rolls. Knowing all the while that art shouldnt aim simply to imitate life. But to outdo it
Forgot About Dre, by Dr Dre featuring Emimem, is released on Interscope on May 27.
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Some peeps thought 2Pac & Makavelli were two different people :grumpy:
lol.. I never heard of that one.. but it did always piss me off when DMX blew up and they kept repeating the same statistic that he was "The First Rap Artist To Release Two Platinum Albums in One Year!!"
Just because Billboard had the 7 Day Theory album under Pac's alias
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lol.. I never heard of that one.. but it did always piss me off when DMX blew up and they kept repeating the same statistic that he was "The First Rap Artist To Release Two Platinum Albums in One Year!!"
Just because Billboard had the 7 Day Theory album under Pac's alias
Fun fact:
Pac wasn't the first one with the Double CD in rap
It was Fresh Prince
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Fun fact:
Pac wasn't the first one with the Double CD in rap
It was Fresh Prince
naah .. that was the first double album on vinyl but the cd was one cd
the first double cd was a no limit compilation called down south hustlers
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Fun fact:
Pac wasn't the first one with the Double CD in rap
It was Fresh Prince
Pac set the trend though where a lot of acts tried to copy the blueprint for a classic double album
most did not succeed
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Pac set the trend though where a lot of acts tried to copy the blueprint for a classic double album
most did not succeed
Yeah that was so dope opening the case to All Eyez On Me and it kind of folded out. That might've been a classy Papa G move to label them Book 1 and Book 2. The artwork, liner notes, credits, everything was top of the industry for that album. And there were literally no skips on an entire double album.
I give P props for doing it before Pac cause usually he was always copying Pac.
Biggie did it for Life After Death and it was a good look for him cause it helped put him on PAC's level — but it didn't play thru as well as PAC's double disc.
Master P also did the double album again with Da Last Don which was a good look for P cause he was the new #1 artist in rap following Pac and Big
Art of War should've been one disc, Kuruption should've been one disc
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Yeah that was so dope opening the case to All Eyez On Me and it kind of folded out. That might've been a classy Papa G move to label them Book 1 and Book 2. The artwork, liner notes, credits, everything was top of the industry for that album. And there were literally no skips on an entire double album.
I give P props for doing it before Pac cause usually he was always copying Pac.
Biggie did it for Life After Death and it was a good look for him cause it helped put him on PAC's level — but it didn't play thru as well as PAC's double disc.
Master P also did the double album again with Da Last Don which was a good look for P cause he was the new #1 artist in rap following Pac and Big
Art of War should've been one disc, Kuruption should've been one disc
Ill add a couple more
Wu-Tang Forever and Thug Mentality 1999
bought both the day they came out and they definitely could have been 1 disc...Krayzie's album had 38 tracks on it
Nas I Am was supposed to be a double album called I Am...The Autobiography but the leaks ruined that idea...I think it would have come closest to AEOM with the tracklist that I saw for it
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Ill add a couple more
Wu-Tang Forever and Thug Mentality 1999
bought both the day they came out and they definitely could have been 1 disc...Krayzie's album had 38 tracks on it
Nas I Am was supposed to be a double album called I Am...The Autobiography but the leaks ruined that idea...I think it would have come closest to AEOM with the tracklist that I saw for it
Yeah, Wutang could've had two classics in a row if they just would've settled for one disc.
Thug Mentality was a let down. (Krayzie's next album had a couple great songs though with the Sade and Tiffany joints are beautiful songs)
As for Nas I Am... I thought that was a down period in his career but I think a lot of those great leaks that came out later and ended up on Lost Tapes or other bootlegs there was some really quality material there. And really, bootlegging was just a New York thing at that time, he could've gotten away with putting out those songs and then I Am could've been a great album. "Nas is Like" was the perfect lead single and that Puffy track was horrendous and should've just been left off. I don't even think the controversy and MTV play even helped that much. I don't know anyone who liked that song "Hate Me Now".
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kinda crazy they put out 3 consecutive posthumous pac double albums after he died
if they cut it down to 10 track albums we lowkey coulda had new pac music droppin to this day
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kinda crazy they put out 3 consecutive posthumous pac double albums after he died
if they cut it down to 10 track albums we lowkey coulda had new pac music droppin to this day
it worked though.. It was a good sales strategy because it made the albums stand out more on the shelf when they were double albums like it was some big deal like "we got so much great music we couldn't fit it on one album" lol
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it worked though.. It was a good sales strategy because it made the albums stand out more on the shelf when they were double albums like it was some big deal like "we got so much great music we couldn't fit it on one album" lol
those 3 actually aged well
r u still down
until the end of time
better dayz
loyal 2 da game and pacs life not so much
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those 3 actually aged well
r u still down
until the end of time
better dayz
loyal 2 da game and pacs life not so much
co-sign ^^
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those 3 actually aged well
r u still down
until the end of time
better dayz
loyal 2 da game and pacs life not so much
UTEOT was the last real and good Pac album..
Yknow d rest!
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UTEOT was the last real and good Pac album..
Yknow d rest!
one thing about these posthumous Pac albums were that most of the songs were remixed
the Makaveli bootlegs that contained the OG versions were the true gems
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one thing about these posthumous Pac albums were that most of the songs were remixed
the Makaveli bootlegs that contained the OG versions were the true gems
UTEOT was the least remixed.. closer to the OGs.. that's why I said what I said
Agree about Makaveli bootlegs..
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one thing about these posthumous Pac albums were that most of the songs were remixed
the Makaveli bootlegs that contained the OG versions were the true gems
yea .. but to be fair, a lot of the remixes were done well
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UTEOT was the last real and good Pac album..
Yknow d rest!
true ("WEST SIDE IN THIS MUTHAFUCKA RIGHT HERE, DEATH ROW (bleeped out) IN HIS MUTHAFUCKA, WEST SIDE IN THIS MUTHAFUCKA!!" 8))
...but "Better Days" had some quality material too. Like, "Never Call U Bitch Again" Pac thought so much of that song that he premiered it at the legendary House of Blues concert.
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yea .. but to be fair, a lot of the remixes were done well
yeah, this debate has been going on forever, and I actually say the same thing—that some of those remixes actually even elevated the songs. Like with "Changes", "Until the End of Time", "To My Unborn Child", "Hell 4 a Hustla", "Wonder if Heaven's Got a Ghetto" many more were elevated in the updated versions.
And the ones that got messed up there was probably a sampling issue they wouldn't have been able to release it anyway. Like, "Play Your Cards Right" O.G. is one of my favorite bootlegs ever and when they redid it, they lost that great sample and totally destroyed the song (but of course that was the Pac's Life album that was poorly done all the way around)
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true ("WEST SIDE IN THIS MUTHAFUCKA RIGHT HERE, DEATH ROW (bleeped out) IN HIS MUTHAFUCKA, WEST SIDE IN THIS MUTHAFUCKA!!" 8))
...but "Better Days" had some quality material too. Like, "Never Call U Bitch Again" Pac thought so much of that song that he premiered it at the legendary House of Blues concert.
Dogg Pound OFTB DJ Quik all bleeped out lol
Some songs were exception were better RMX was better than OG but only few
"Ghetto Gospel" "Changes"
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yeah, this debate has been going on forever, and I actually say the same thing—that some of those remixes actually even elevated the songs. Like with "Changes", "Until the End of Time", "To My Unborn Child", "Hell 4 a Hustla", "Wonder if Heaven's Got a Ghetto" many more were elevated in the updated versions.
And the ones that got messed up there was probably a sampling issue they wouldn't have been able to release it anyway. Like, "Play Your Cards Right" O.G. is one of my favorite bootlegs ever and when they redid it, they lost that great sample and totally destroyed the song (but of course that was the Pac's Life album that was poorly done all the way around)
no doubt
i think people on these forums underestimate just how often songs you believe to be the original version are actually remixes .... there will be a song on maimonides like that
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UTEOT was the least remixed.. closer to the OGs.. that's why I said what I said
Agree about Makaveli bootlegs..
that's more than fair
UTEOT contained the most Johnny J production...QDIII as well
Better Dayz is when they started to put producers like Jazzy Pha and others
one remix I liked was Military Minds from that album done by E.D.I.
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those 3 actually aged well
r u still down
until the end of time
better dayz
loyal 2 da game and pacs life not so much
Nah I always thought they made a mistake dropping R U Still Down first after his death. The sound was so outdated already hiphop moves fast and after AEOM and 7 Day Theory they needed to drop something from the Makaveli era all that other shit coulda came later. R U Still down was recorded before Me Against The World. Maybe Afeni didn't have her hands on the Deathrow masters yet I don't know maybe that's why they dropped that first. Personally I think the Greatest Hits album should've been first. But shit they made so many mistakes handling pac's legacy I could go on for hours.
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Nah I always thought they made a mistake dropping R U Still Down first after his death. The sound was so outdated already hiphop moves fast and after AEOM and 7 Day Theory they needed to drop something from the Makaveli era all that other shit coulda came later. R U Still down was recorded before Me Against The World. Maybe Afeni didn't have her hands on the Deathrow masters yet I don't know maybe that's why they dropped that first. Personally I think the Greatest Hits album should've been first. But shit they made so many mistakes handling pac's legacy I could go on for hours.
I disagree with this... it was the late 90's with major labels that aren't going to make mistakes or put out some sloppy Indie effort
The agreement between Suge and Afeni went like this. She got to release an album and then Death Row got to release an album. So she released R U Still Down because Death Row didn't have the rights to any of those songs because they were recorded before Death Row. I agree that fans might've been looking for some hardcore Death Row sound after the legendary AEOM and 7 Day Theory but I will argue that the album was a dark album. It wasn't hardcore but it was very dark and dealt with death and loss and had that Van Gogh artwork vibe "Starry Night" and Pac talked about how much he was influenced by Don McClean's "Starry Night" it had that great lead single where Pac was the camera going to heaven on a bus with Elvis and Jimmy Hendrix. So if you think about it "I Ain't Mad at Cha" came out after Pac died and "I Wonder if Heaven Got a Ghetto" was a pretty solid transition as music video released a year later.
Then don't forget the Outlawz Still I Rise. That was Death Row and was very well done. "Black Jesus" and "Hell 4 a Hustla" were much better than their O.G. versions and "Still I Rise" was about equal to that Syke "96 Big Bodies Sittin On Chrome" O.G. version, "Letter to the President" they were able to keep the same as the O.G. and they did wonders for the lead single "Baby Don't Cry" was an improvement on the O.G.
So all those albums were well done:
R U Still Down
Greatest Hits
Still I Rise
Until the End of Time
HighEyecue is right they started slipping a bit when they moved away from Pac related artists and producers for Better Dayz. But even Better Dayz was still dope and had some great moments.
Eminem shouldn't be blamed for the Pac album he did, they only had scraps and he tried to make chicken salad out of chicken shit. He also helped them with the Soundtrack for the Pac documentary had a few nice joints
Really their only big disaster was Pac's Life (and NuMixx Classics sold well, but I never bothered much with that one)
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Nah I always thought they made a mistake dropping R U Still Down first after his death. The sound was so outdated already hiphop moves fast and after AEOM and 7 Day Theory they needed to drop something from the Makaveli era all that other shit coulda came later. R U Still down was recorded before Me Against The World. Maybe Afeni didn't have her hands on the Deathrow masters yet I don't know maybe that's why they dropped that first. Personally I think the Greatest Hits album should've been first. But shit they made so many mistakes handling pac's legacy I could go on for hours.
dated or not, there was some great shit on there
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Really their only big disaster was Pac's Life (and NuMixx Classics sold well, but I never bothered much with that one)
I actually rate Nu-Mixx Classics a lot. Its refreshing to hear these classic 2Pac tracks over different production after listening to the originals so many times.
Plus it still Death Row so it feels like an authentic 2Pac album compared to some of the other ones.
Never actually checked out Volume 2 so I should get round to that.