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Tha Dogg Pound

 
Artist: Tha Dogg Pound
 

Group Members:

Similar Artists:

Influenced By:

Followers:

B.G. Knocc out & Dresta

Performed Songs By:

Kurupt, Dat Nigga Daz, R. Brown

Formal Connection With:

  • Genres: Rap
  • Representative Albums: "Cali Iz Active," "Dogg Chit," "Dogg Food"
  • Representative Songs: "New York, New York," "Let's Play House," "Just Doggin'"

Biography

Tha Dogg Pound was an integral part of the Death Row Records empire, which cast a tall shadow over rap music in the early to mid-'90s, and though the label only released one Dogg Pound album, Dogg Food (1995), the duo's impression remained fairly constant in the years that followed, as the two group members pursued solo careers and occasionally reunited. Kurupt (born Ricardo Brown; November 23, 1972) and Dat Nigga Daz (born Delmar Arnaud; May 25, 1973) comprise Tha Dogg Pound (not to be confused with Dogg Pound Posse, a different and much shorter-lived hardcore rap group).

The two Californians began their recording careers individually, both of them featured sporadically on the foundational Death Row release, Dr. Dre's landmark The Chronic (1992). Kurupt and Daz were first billed together as Tha Dogg Pound on "Niggas Don't Give a Fuck," their contribution to the Poetic Justice soundtrack (1993). Later that year they reappeared as Tha Dogg Pound on Doggystyle, the solo debut of Snoop Doggy Dogg, where they were featured on a few songs, most prominently the hit single "Doggy Dogg World." In 1994 they were featured on a pair of Death Row soundtracks, Above the Rim ("Big Pimpin'") and Murder Was the Case ("What Would U Do?," "Who Got Some Gangsta Shit?," "Come Up to My Room"). Around this same time, Daz established himself as a capable producer, with the Lady of Rage's "Afro Puffs" to his credit, among other tracks.

Death Row released Tha Dogg Pound's debut album, Dogg Food, on Halloween 1995. It was quite a success, topping the Billboard 200 album chart. "Let's Play House" was the biggest hit, breaking into the Top 50 of the Hot 100, while "New York, New York" was an MTV favorite; in the video for the latter, Kurupt, Daz, and Snoop stomped Godzilla-like around the Big Apple, taunting their East Coast rivals. Tha Dogg Pound remained active thereafter, rapping on both 2Pac's All Eyez on Me (1996) and Snoop's Tha Doggfather (1996); Daz produced on a number of tracks on both albums as well, including the singles "2 of Amerikaz Most Wanted," "I Ain't Mad at Cha," and "Doggfather," not to mention numerous album tracks.

With Dr. Dre's sudden departure from Death Row in 1996, Daz assumed the vacated role of chief in-house producer. And then with the murder of 2Pac and the incarceration of label head Suge Knight later that same year, Daz assumed leadership. Consequently, pretty much everything released by Death Row in the late '90s featured Daz prominently -- from the holiday compilation Christmas on Death Row (1996) and the two-CD Gridlock'd soundtrack (1997), to the never-released Danny Boy album and the long-delayed Lady of Rage debut, Necessary Roughness (1997), Daz was involved both as producer and rapper.

Death Row began to unravel quickly in the wake of 2Pac's murder, however, and Interscope Records sold its interest in the label in August 1997. As Suge sat in prison and Snoop left for greener pastures, Daz (who now billed himself as Daz Dillinger) tried to keep the sinking ship afloat. Released in March 1998, his solo debut, Retaliation, Revenge and Get Back, was the final Death Row album of its era. (A vault's worth of unreleased Death Row material would be mined in subsequent years, beginning with G-Funk Classics, Vols. 1 & 2, a double-disc Nate Dogg album released by Breakaway Records in July.) In the meantime, Kurupt had already made arrangements for a solo career of his own. He'd left Death Row shortly after 2Pac's murder and signed to Antra Records. His Antra debut, Kuruption!, was a double album, and he followed it with Tha Streetz Iz a Mutha (1999) and Space Boogie: Smoke Oddessey (2001).

While Kurupt was struggling with his solo career, which ground to a halt with Space Boogie, Daz was busy at the helm of D.P.G. Recordz (aka Gangsta Advisory Recordingz). He made his label debut with R.A.W. (2000) and followed with numerous others in the years that followed, notably a couple collaborations with Kurupt: Dillinger & Young Gotti (2001) and Dillinger & Young Gotti, Vol. 2: Tha Saga Continues (2005). Daz also mined his vault of unreleased recordings, issuing The Last of tha Pound (2004) and DPGC : The Remix LP (2005). Death Row, rejuvenated -- for a moment, at least -- after Suge's return from prison, mined its own vault for old Dogg Pound recordings, issuing 2002 (2001).

To the surprise of many, Kurupt returned to the Death Row fold in 2002, after his Antra contract expired and his one-off collaboration with Daz had run its course. He assumed the role of vice president, a title once held by Dr. Dre; however, little material resulted from the arrangement, as his solo album, Against tha Grain, was delayed repeatedly, all the way until 2005, by which time Kurupt's relationship with Suge had soured. Distributed and marketed by Koch, Against tha Grain sold poorly, and Kurupt left the confines of Death Row once again. He in turn mended his relationship with Daz, who had developed an adversarial, and often antagonistic, relationship with Suge and Death Row, and by association, Kurupt.

Snoop's so-called Western Conference in December 2005 went a long way toward initiating a new partnership between Kurupt and Daz, and a promising year awaited. In 2006, Daz released Kurupt's Same Day, Different Shit on D.P.G.; Koch released a full-fledged Dogg Pound reunion album, Cali Iz Active; and Jermaine Dupri released Daz's So So Gangsta on his So So Def Recordings label. As if this flurry of 2006 releases weren't enough, Tha Dogg Pound returned in March 2007 with Dogg Chit, whose cover quotes that of Dogg Food. ~ Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Tha Dogg Pound
Top
Tha Dogg Pound
Origin Long Beach, California
Genre(s) Hip hop
Occupation(s) Rapping, producing
Years active 1992 - 2002
2005 - present
Label(s) Death Row Records
Interscope Records
Gangsta Advisory Records
D.P.G. Recordz
E1 Music
Doggystyle Records
Universal Records
Cash Money Records
Associated acts 213, The HRSMN, The Gang, Riflemen, Q.D.T., Originals, Nine Inch Dix, Death Row Records, N.W.A, Tha Eastsidaz, Doggy's Angels, Roscoe, The Twinz, The Dove Shack, RBX, Da 5 Footaz, Dubb Union, LBC Crew, Teddy Riley, DJ Quik, Ras Kass, Killah Priest, Canibus, Terrace Martin, The Boondocks, Jayo Felony, 40 Glocc, Mobb Deep, Blackstreet, Guy, JT the Bigga Figga, Lil' ½ Dead
Website www.dpgrecordz.com
MySpace
Members
Daz Dillinger
Kurupt
Former members
Snoop Dogg
Nate Dogg
Soopafly

Tha Dogg Pound, also known as D.P.G. (Dogg Pound Gangstaz), is a rap duo made up of Daz Dillinger and Kurupt. They were signed to Death Row Records in their early careers and were key to the label's success. The group made their 1992 rap debut on Dr. Dre's The Chronic, on various songs. They also appeared on Snoop Dogg's debut album Doggystyle, and the Death Row soundtracks Murder Was The Case and Above The Rim. Their debut album Dogg Food was released in 1995. It was another addition to the controversy of hardcore hip hop due to the sexual and violent lyrics and went on to sell three million albums.

Kurupt and Daz went on to release solo albums starting in 1998. They had both eventually left the crumbling Death Row Records in 1999 after Daz left due to long-lasting internal struggles on the label after friend and labelmate Tupac Shakur's murder in 1996. Kurupt started Antra Records, while Daz started D.P.G. Recordz. In 2002 a feud arose between the two when Kurupt decided to sign back with Death Row Records, upsetting everyone involved with the group. His awaited Death Row release Against Tha Grain had been postponed several times while Kurupt was on the label, later being released in August 2006, after he was off. In January 2005, Daz made another solo album release titled Tha Dogg Pound Gangsta LP. Tha Dogg Pound then got back together as a group and released Dillinger & Young Gotti II in November 2005. In 2006 Snoop Dogg decided to get involved and the three released their official reunion album Cali Iz Active.

An extended family, referred to as D.P.G.C. (short for Dogg Pound Gangsta Crips[citation needed]), has over time been made up of Snoop Dogg, Daz Dillinger, Kurupt, Nate Dogg, Soopafly, & Warren G. The members of the DPGC are commonly featured on each other's albums and projects.

Contents

History

Death Row Years (1992-1998)

Before the The Chronic album came out, Tha Dogg Pound consisted of Daz, Kurupt, and later Snoop Dogg, Nate Dogg & Soopafly. They instantly took the West Coast music industry by storm. When Snoop's debut album Doggystyle was released in 1993 it looked like Tha Dogg Pound was shortened to just Daz and Kurupt.

In 1995, Daz and Kurupt released their debut album Dogg Food under Death Row Records. The album debuted #1 on the Billboard 200 and went on to reach 2x platinum status. In October towards the end of the same year 2Pac Shakur had been bailed out of jail by Death Row's Suge Knight and was immediately introduced into the Death Row family and became good friends with Tha Dogg Pound especially.

In 1996, they were featured on 2Pac's legendary and widely acclaimed Death Row Records debut All Eyez on Me with Daz Dillinger producing the hit songs "2 Of Amerikaz Most Wanted", "Ambitionz Az A Ridah", and "I Ain't Mad At Cha" among other tracks which solidifed his status as a talented and successful producer. In early September of the same year, Shakur was murdered in Las Vegas, Nevada. Kurupt and Daz were deeply affected by this and struggled to release anything after Shakur's passing. 7 years later in a 2003 interview, Daz stated that he now believed Suge Knight was responsible for Shakur's murder.

Kurupt and Daz leave Death Row (1999-2001)

In 1998 Kurupt left Death Row but remained in Tha Dogg Pound. Kurupt released two solo albums in 1998 (Kuruption!) and 1999 (Tha Streetz Iz a Mutha) that had Daz and the rest of DPG on them. However, in 1998 Daz was making noise of his own over at Death Row and released his only Death Row album (Retaliation, Revenge and Get Back) which went gold. Afterwards he made his own label called Mobstyle Muzik, in which he had his first taste of the independent scene. Mobstyle's first release Poppa Snoop Presents Mobstyle Muzik Volume 1 failed and Daz returned to Death Row. He later started up DPG Recordz along with Christopher "Big C-Style" Bowden through Death Row Records.

Daz also eventually parted ways with Death Row in late 1999 and released his first independent album R.A.W. in 2000. That was followed by the D.P.G. album from Tha Dogg Pound entitled Dillinger & Young Gotti. After Tha Dogg Pound's full departure from Death Row, Suge Knight claimed ownership of the name "Tha Dogg Pound" and any tracks recorded prior to them leaving. To avoid a legal battle at the time Daz changed their marketing name to D.P.G. short for Dogg Pound Gangstaz. In 2001, Suge Knight released a Dogg Pound album entitled "2002" which consisted of unreleased Dogg Pound tracks. Daz has been quoted as saying this album was "bullshit", and even claimed to have raided Death Row Records vaults during one of Suge Knight's incarcerations and stole back as many DPG songs as he could find. Most of which were Soopafly's songs and featured on his 2001 solo album Dat Whoopty Woop.

Beef & Separation

External Beef

Over the years Tha Dogg Pound had beef with Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, due to Death Row Records being embroiled in a feud with Eazy-E's Ruthless Records. Tha Dogg Pound made a diss towards The Bone Thugs, on the song Dogg Pound Gangstaz, with Kurupt's line "Ain't got no love for no hoes in harmony." In response Layzie Bone shot back on the track Shots to tha Double Glock with the line "Dogg Pound hoes it's on." "Krayzie Bone says "Gotta find these 'Row Hoes" in the song "Mo' Murda" off the East 99 album. The feud ended when Snoop Dogg and Kurupt were featured on Krayzie Bone's album Thug Mentality 1999 in the song The War Iz On. Krayzie Bone also features on Daz Dillinger's 2008 solo album Only on the Left Side on the song Meal Ticket.

Tha Dogg Pound were also involved in a feud with B.G. Knocc Out & Dresta. In response to Eazy-E's Real Muthaphukkin G's and Kokane & Cold 187um's "Don't Bite The Funk", Tha Dogg Pound along with Snoop Dogg made a track called What Would You Do with such lines as: "Fuck B.G. Knocc Out and every nigga down with him." Later B.G. Knocc Out & Dresta retaliated with the song D.P.G. Killa, on their debut album Real Brothas. They have since squashed the beef and released a song called Blaze it up, as a bonus track on Tha Dogg Pound's Dogg Chit album.

Internal Beef (2002-2004)

In late 2002, Kurupt shocked the entire DPGC and fans alike, when he wound up signing back to Death Row Records as vice president under Suge Knight. It is believed Kurupt was nostalgic of the former Death Row days when Shakur was alive and wished to restore that glory somehow and stay true to the Death Row persona. Daz, Soopafly, Snoop, Terry Choe a.k.a Teezy and the rest of DPGC viewed this as betrayal and took many shots and dissed Kurupt harshly for making the move. Kurupt did the same claiming they all were wrong to have turned their backs on Death Row. They declared war between both camps and that he was not the one who changed, rather them.

The rap duo heavily dissed each other from 2003 to late 2004, both recording diss albums against each other. Daz took aim at Kurupt and Death Row with his single U Ain't Shit featuring Bad Azz and another song I Don't Give a Fucc which is sung over the beat to 50 Cent's In Da Club. Kurupt responded heavily with his Originals album which featured many disses throughout nearly every song, most notably the bonus track Eat a Dicc (Fucc Daz).

Reunion & Cali Iz Active (2005-2006)

It was like that until early 2005 when Kurupt and Daz made a truce. The struggling Death Row failed to promote and release Kurupt's album "Against Tha Grain" and the duo began to feel remorse for one another. Kurupt left Death Row apparently along with their former "Tha Dogg Pound" alias and reunited with Daz. The duo started rapping together again and even made a new album together entitled "Dillinger & Young Gotti II: Tha Saga Continuez." After The Western Conference in 2005 the two of them agreed to revitalize the DPGC by working together once again on an album with Snoop Dogg, Soopafly, Warren G and Nate Dogg, with Snoop taking over the producing and distributing tasks for it.

Tha Dogg Pound then released a joint venture reunion comeback project the next year in 2006 called Cali Iz Active under the aegis of Snoop Dogg's Doggystyle Records with the main single "Cali Iz Active" featuring Snoop Dogg and a wide range of new producers throughout the album. The album wasn't received with much acclaim and the various producers did not seem to fit the Daz and Kurupt style leaving fans reminiscent of the G-funk sound that Cali Iz Active lacked.

Dogg Chit & New Projects (2007-Present)

Several months later their next album entitled Dogg Chit was released independently on March 27, 2007; with the single Vibe also featuring Snoop Dogg. This album goes back to their G-funk roots with a reminiscent style similar to Dogg Food and features Daz Dillinger back as the main producer on almost every song. The album cover is very similar to the Dogg Food album cover, and the album was successfully received by DPG fans and G-funk fans as a solid Dogg Pound album.

In August 2007 it was announced that Tha Dogg Pound had signed to Birdman's Cash Money Records. Their next album was expected to be entitled Westcoast Aftershocc but has since been postponed in favor of the 100 Wayz album due to, in short, Cash Money not being able to raise the required money for the project. The contract had since been apparently ended but in a later interview Kurupt stated the deal is still on the table but only postponed. Daz Dillinger did however leak the singles entitled "Ch-Ching" and "Mystic River" which would have promoted the new deal and album. The deal with Cash Money and the Westcoast Aftershocc album is still on the table but is on hold as the duo pursues other projects. The single "Ch-Ching" was later released along with other unreleased tracks on Tha Dogg Pound's online iTunes album entitled Let's Ryde 2Night EP. Mystic River is now likely to be the main single off of Kurupt's upcoming new solo album History of Violence. Westcoast Aftershocc is in production for a 2009 release on Cash Money Records.

100 Wayz features Pharrell on the club single Cheat released in early 2008. Daz will be producing most of the album but also features producers such as Pete Rock, Swizz Beatz and Hi-Tek. Cheat was followed up with the street singles They Don't Want It featuring Soopafly and Get My Drink On & My Smoke On to promote the album heading into the summer. 100 Wayz was expected to be released in the summer of 2008 but has since been delayed as Tha Dogg Pound seeks an optimal distribution deal for the album. Tha Dogg Pound recently released their latest single and video Y'all Know What I'm Doin featuring Turf Talk with a brand new album cover. A release date for the album was aimed at January of 2009 but has since been delayed.

Tha Dogg Pound also has another iTunes exclusive album due out in the summer of 2009 called "Get Paid" as well as a collaboration album with Pete Rock under the current title of "Pete Rock & Tha Dogg Pound."

Discography

Albums

Album information
Paw Printz
Dogg Food
Dillinger & Young Gotti
2002
The Last of Tha Pound
Dillinger & Young Gotti II: Tha Saga Continuez...
  • Released: November 1, 2005
  • Label: D.P.G. Recordz
  • Chart positions: #101 US
  • US Sales: 113,000 copies [1]
  • Singles: Push Bacc, Hittin Donutz in The Streetz, DPGC Muzic
Cali Iz Active
Dogg Chit
Let's Ryde 2Night EP
  • Released: March 22, 2008
  • Label: Dogg Pound Online / INgrooves
  • Chart positions:
  • US sales:
  • Singles: Ch-Ching
100 Wayz
Get Paid
  • Released: TBA
  • Label: Dogg Pound Online / INgrooves
  • Chart positions:
  • US sales:
  • Singles: Get Paid
Pete Rock & Tha Dogg Pound

Singles

  • Tha Dogg Pound - "What Would You Do" (feat. Snoop Dogg & Big Pimpin')
  • Tha Dogg Pound - "New York, New York" (feat. Snoop Dogg)
  • Tha Dogg Pound - "Let's Play House" (feat. Nate Dogg & Michel'le); # 45 US
  • Tha Dogg Pound - "Because of You Girl" (feat. Tha Realest, cameo appearance by Heather Hunter)
  • Tha Dogg Pound - "Nothin' But the Cavi Hit" (feat. Mack 10); # 38 US
  • Tha Dogg Pound - "Just Doggin'" (feat. Nate Dogg and Michel'le)"; # 99 UK
  • D.P.G. - "Coastin"
  • D.P.G. - "Hittin Donutz In The Streetz"
  • D.P.G. - "DPGC Muzic"
  • D.P.G.C. - "Real Soon"; # 49 AUS
  • Tha Dogg Pound - "Cali Iz Active" (feat. Snoop Dogg)
  • Tha Dogg Pound - "Sittin on 23z"
  • Tha Dogg Pound - "Vibe" (feat. Snoop Dogg)
  • Tha Dogg Pound - "Where U From" (feat. Bad Azz)
  • Tha Dogg Pound - "Ch-Ching"
  • Tha Dogg Pound - "They Don't Want It"
  • Tha Dogg Pound - "Cheat" (feat. Pharrell)
  • Tha Dogg Pound - "Get My Drink On & My Smoke On"
  • Tha Dogg Pound - "Y'all Know What I'm Doin" (feat. Turf Talk)
  • Tha Dogg Pound - "U Gets Nothin" (feat. Carlos & Snoop Dogg)
  • Tha Dogg Pound - "Get Paid"

Tha Dogg Pound songs on members' solo albums

Daz Dillinger

Kurupt

Awards

Grammy Award nominations

Tha Dogg Pound has been nominated for one Grammy Award but has not yet won an award as of 2008.

Category Genre Song Year Result
Grammy Award for Best Rap Performance By A Duo Or Group Rap "What Would You Do" 1996 Nominated

References

External links


 
 

 

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