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Dr
Dre - Bio
Andre Young, 18 February 1965, South
Central, Los Angeles, USA. Widely regarded, by Rolling
Stone at least, as the chief architect of west coast
gangsta rap, Dre's musical career began as a DJ at Los
Angeles dance club, Eve After Dark. There he would splice
up a mix of new records with soul classics like Martha
And The Vandellas. The club had a back room with a
small four-track studio where he, together with future- NWA
member Yella and Lonzo WIlliams, would record demos. The
first of these was 'Surgery', a basic electro track with
a chorus of 'Calling Dr Dre to surgery'. These sessions,
and nights at Eve After Dark, taught him the turntable
techniques he would later bring to NWA, after forming the
World
Class Wreckin' Cru at the age of 17. Although
other former members such as Ice Cube
had laid the ground for rap's immersion into the
mainstream, the success of Dre's debut solo effort, The
Chronic, confirmed its commercial breakthrough. It
also signalled a change in tack by modern gangsta
rappers. The music now took its cue from the funk of George
Clinton and Funkadelic,
Dre freely admitting to the influence Clinton played on
his life: 'Back in the 70s that's all people were doing:
getting high, wearing Afros, bell-bottoms and listening
to Parliament-Funkadelic. That's why I called my album The Chronic
and based my music and the concepts like I did: because
his shit was a big influence on my music. Very big'. To
this end he created a studio band for the sessions, which
included the R&B talents of Tony Green (bass) and
Ricky Rouse (guitar). While Dre's lyrics were just as
forceful as those that had graced NWA, there was also a
shift in subject matter. The Chronic
referred heavily to the recreational use of marijuana,
taking its name from a particularly virulent, and
popular, brand. Together with the efforts of Cypress
Hill, cannabis was now the drug of choice for the
gangsta rapper, with crack cocaine much discussed but
rarely endorsed. The Chronic
would go on to spend eight months in the Billboard Top
10. At least as important was Dre's growing reputation as
a producer. As well as producing an album for one of his
many girlfriends, Michel'le,
his work with Eazy E, D.O.C.,
Above
The Law and, most importantly, Snoop
Doggy Dogg, broke new ground. Snoop had already
rapped with Dre on the hit singles, 'Deep Cover' and
'Nuthin' But A 'G' Thang'. However, the Doggy Style opus
would break box office records, bringing gangsta rap to
the top of the album charts. Many sustained the belief
that Dre was the driving force behind its success, the
producer himself acknowledging: 'I can take a three year
old and make a hit record with him'. At the same time he
was dismissive of his own, pioneering efforts for NWA,
particularly the epoch-making Straight Outta Compton :
'To this day I can't stand that album, I threw that thing
together in six weeks so we could have something to sell
out of the trunk'. During his involvement with the NWA
posse he became the house producer for Eazy E's Ruthless
Records.
Seven out of eight albums he produced for the label
between 1983 and 1991 went platinum, but he broke from
Ruthless over what he alleged was under-payment. Dre's
on-record sneers at Eazy E began shortly afterwards,
including The
Chronic 's 'Dre Day', a putdown which Eazy E
would countermand for his reply, 'Muthaphukkin' Gs'.
Like many of rap's leading lights, Dre never strayed
far from controversy, even after he bought into the
comfort of a luxury home in San Fernando Valley. As if to
reinstate himself as a 'true gangsta', Dre waged a war of
attrition with authority. Television host Dee Barnes
filed a multi-million dollar lawsuit against him for
allegedly throwing her against the wall of a Hollywood
nightclub in 1991. He was also convicted of breaking the
jaw of a record producer (he was sentenced to house
arrest and was fitted with a tracking device), and was
detained by mounted police after a fracas in a New
Orleans hotel lobby. Eazy E sued him, while Dre
complained bitterly about restraint of trade and monies
owed, cursed Ruthless General Manager Jerry Heller, and
finally managed to find a deal with Jimmy Iovine at
Interscope, who let him set up his own label, Death
Row Records, co-founded with the controversial Marion
'Suge' Knight, Vanilla
Ice 's ex-publicist. The success of The Chronic
and Doggy Style, and the signing of rap's biggest
new star Tupac
Shakur, briefly made Death Row one of America's
most powerful labels. By 1996, however, its well
documented problems culminated in Dre acrimoniously
leaving to form his own Aftermath label. The label's
first release was a various artists compilation, whose
standout track was Dre's declamatory hit single 'Been
There Done That', a kiss-off to gangsta rap and Death
Row.
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