Dr. Dre's seminal 1992 album, The Chronic, turns 20 next 
month. Though a sensation upon its release, the raw-but-melodic work's 
legend has only grown in the ensuing decades, and today seemingly every 
MC-producer duo fancies itself the next Dre and Snoop Dogg. It has 
become the most influential rap work ever made, and perhaps even the 
greatest -- a case made by Jeff Weiss in the post above this one.
But it almost never happened. Despite the success Dre had experienced
 with N.W.A, he was entangled in contractual problems with his former 
crewmate Eazy-E's label. For that reason, as well as Death Row's dodgy 
reputation, The Chronic had a hard time finding release. It took 
the shepherding of renegade upstart Interscope Records, the financing of
 convicted drug kingpin Michael Harris and the steady hand of Suge 
Knight, an intimidating former defensive end, to give it life.
A 2001 documentary from Santa Monica-based production company Xenon Pictures, Welcome to Death Row: The Rise and Fall of Death Row Records,
 tells the story of Knight's infamous imprint, as well as the rise of 
Snoop and Tupac Shakur. Its producers -- Jeff Scheftel, Leigh Savidge 
and Steve Housden -- gained unprecedented access to Harris while he was 
behind bars. They also spoke with some 100 other figures associated with
 the label, from publicists and drug dealers to Chronic performers.
Xenon gathered far more material than it could use for the film, and plans to publish much of the rest in a 2013 book: Welcome to Death Row: An Oral History of Death Row Records. With the company's blessing, we've excerpted some of that material below, focusing on The Chronic and its immediate aftermath.
Our story begins with the 1991 inception of Death Row Records. Dre 
was then working closely with veteran record producer Dick Griffey, the 
founder of Solar Records, a successful R&B and soul imprint. 
(Griffey died in 2010.) Alonzo Williams, who kicks things off below, 
helmed electro-rap group World Class Wreckin' Cru, which gave Dr. Dre 
his start.
ALONZO WILLIAMS: The name Death Row came from my partner, 
Unknown [DJ]. Initially it was supposed to be Def Row, as in Def Jam. 
D-E-F. And Dre bought the name Def Row and changed the name.
DICK GRIFFEY: They were housed in my building, so they didn't 
have a lot of expenses. The greatest expense in making a record is the 
studio time. I had a six-story building. They were down on the third 
floor. ... Since I didn't have a lot of experience in rap or hip-hop, I 
kind of let them do their own thing.
JEFFREY JOLSON-COLBURN (former Hollywood Reporter music
 editor): There had been gangsta rap before [Death Row], and Priority 
Records and some other labels were active in it, but there wasn't a 
label that was totally dedicated to gangsta rap. There was hardly a name
 for it then. It was just hard-core street rap, and N.W.A summed up the 
scene the best. 
DR DRE*: Suge's role was handling the day-to-day business, 
dealing with artists, dealing with distributors and record companies. My
 job was to push these buttons and make the records happen.
SNOOP DOGG: Back then, Suge was very behind-the-scenes and 
helpful and quiet, humble, nonvisible. He didn't like cameras. He was 
the invisible man.
VIRGIL ROBERTS (attorney and former Solar president): The 
initial understanding was that [rapper] D.O.C. and Dre and Dick and Suge
 would be partners in this company.
ALONZO WILLIAMS: Everyone was following Dre, because people knew Dre was The Man. Everything he touched was gold or platinum, or better.
JOHN PAYNE: (studio engineer): The [influx] of talent was the 
result of people wanting to work for Dre and not a result of Suge going 
out and finding them. Dre was the only asset the company had. He was 
actually the most bankable person at that time -- pretty much in the 
industry -- from the R&B and rap standpoint.
NATE DOGG: Everybody was taking direction from Dre, as he 
knows what he's doing. He just finished doing N.W.A albums ... so you 
have confidence. You've watched this man make money.
SNOOP DOGG: The first tape [of mine] that Warren G gave Dre 
was the one that hooked me up. When he finally got a chance to hear me, I
 was ready. I didn't want to rap for him until I was ready. ... Warren G
 and Nate Dogg were my best friends, and we formed 213. We didn't have 
drum machines back then, just records, turntables and a microphone. 
Warren G called me and was, like, "Snoop, I got Dre on the phone, he 
liked the tape, he wants to work with us." And I said, "Nigga, stop 
lying." And someone said, "Hello?" And I said, "Who's this?" And he 
said, "It's Dre. Man, that shit was dope. I want to get with you. Come 
to the studio Monday."
NATE DOGG: At that time, it was a dream to just be in the same
 room with Dre. Dre wanted us to come to the studio? I'd have jogged up 
there if I didn't have a car.
SNOOP DOGG: It was me, D.O.C., Lady of Rage and Warren G. Then
 I brought RBX and Kurupt and Daz. And Jewell was down there, too. She 
was there from the beginning. It was a change from Dre's house to Solar 
Records. We were in an environment where real records were being made.
NATE DOGG: [W]hen Dre walked in, it was time to work. All work and no play.
SNOOP DOGG: Dick Griffey back then was the "chicken man." When
 we needed food, he'd break us off some [money] for some chicken. We 
needed a few hundred dollars for the rent and he'd come through. He was 
like Grampa. Dick Griffey was good to us back then. ... We used to stay 
up all night, didn't leave till 5 or 6 in the morning. There was a 
special vibe; you just wanted to be there. It was right in the middle of
 Hollywood and we'd never really been out of the neighborhood and we was
 getting a chance to see it all. This was the same studio that Shalamar,
 Lakeside, The Whispers, Babyface recorded their albums in.
JOHN KING (bodyguard): Death Row started out as a family. We 
used to have meetings, sayin', "We're gonna come up!" When it got to be 
more of a business, where contracts had to be signed and documents had 
to be accounted for, that took the love out of it.
JOHN PAYNE: The early days of Death Row were rather dismal, rather poverty-stricken. It was like that show with Jimmie Walker, Good Times.
NATE DOGG: The best records came out when we were starving.
SNOOP DOGG: My first apartment was fun for me; I had a pet 
roach. We called him Gooch. He would always come out when we had 
company. We started feeding and taking care of him because he was one of
 the homeboys. Rent was $500 a month. Manager was named Wendy. (Still 
owe you -- I'll holler back at you.) About seven people in one bedroom. 
And we had a ball. Five hundred dollars and somehow we never had the 
rent money on time.
JEWELL: Snoop wasn't getting money back then, either. Suge told us after we put out The Chronic album, he was gonna give us all $100,000. I never saw it.
SUGE KNIGHT**: The money I gave 'em came out of my pocket.
DICK GRIFFEY: These guys were broke all the time. Nobody ever had any money. I was on the phone with Suge's wife, paying the house payments.
The soundtrack for the film Deep Cover arrived in spring 1992 and introduced Snoop Dogg to the mainstream via the work's title track, which he performed with Dre.  
JOHN PAYNE: The [artists] got the right exposure on the Deep Cover soundtrack. Until then, Snoop was basically sitting around the studio, wanting to do something. Nobody had heard of him.
JOHN KING: Snoop had this voice. It sounded like he was singin', but he was rappin'. It was something new, and it took the world over.
DOUG YOUNG (record promoter): I remember tellin' Snoop, "Man, 
you're about to be huge." And maybe an hour after I had told them about 
that, Snoop walks to Jack in the Box on Sunset and Cahuenga, and saw the
 guys from [A] Tribe Called Quest. And they said, "Man, let's take a 
picture!" and asked him for his autograph, just like girls. Because of Deep Cover.  
VIRGIL ROBERTS: "187 on a motherfuckin' cop" became, like, a national anthem.  
NATE DOGG: When Snoop blew up on Deep Cover, it looked like we were all blowing up. It pumped me up; I can't wait till it's my turn.
LYDIA HARRIS (wife of Michael Harris): I seen a change in Suge [after the success of Deep Cover]. He was handlin' things different. 
DICK GRIFFEY: Suge was somewhat playful and kind of a bully. 
He'd threaten people from time to time and they'd take him seriously. 
Have an argument with the engineer and tell him they were gonna shoot 
him if he didn't get stuff right on the board. Lots of unnecessary 
drama.  
CPO (rapper): Bloods was sittin' in the office at Death Row. 
They're friends of someone, friends of friends of the artist. So you 
know they're stealin'. Stealin' Post-its. That's how they are.
JOHN KING: Even at Death Row, they had cliques. Suge had his 
clique, Dre had his, Snoop had his. Everybody did their own thing. 
Suge's people weren't his artists; they were the people he grew up with.
 His homeboys.
LAMONT BLUMFIELD (artist manager): Suge was rollin' up in a Benz all day. He had a Benz and a Lexus. Snoop was getting evicted when Deep Cover came out -- something ain't right. We helped him move his stuff from a little bitty one-bedroom apartment in Hollywood. 
NATE DOGG: I think [The Chronic] was a classic because everyone on it was hungry. Everybody put their all into The Chronic album. This was going to build a record company; this would build all our careers.
LAMONT BLUMFIELD: You had so many hungry, starving individuals
 that wanted to be superstars, who put their talent together, and it 
came out a classic.
JEWELL: It wasn't like we had money to hang with our friends, 
so we just hung together. We'd be up there eatin' Popeye's chicken, five
 days a week. And we created a masterpiece.
JOHN PAYNE: They were poor as hell, but they were still a family, still havin' fun. 
SNOOP DOGG: We had weed, the best weed, you know what I'm sayin'? That's why we made The Chronic,
 because we had the chronic. ... I was just happy to be workin' with 
Dre. I had my own apartment. I was getting a thousand dollars a month, 
had all the best weed I wanted. My girl was lovin' me, I was lovin' her.
 It was all just crackin'. 
JEWELL: It all worked. My singin' over their hard rap lyrics; 
rap had never accepted that before. I put my soft, sultry R&B 
singing on their records. Now every rapper has to have a female on their
 songs.
SNOOP DOGG: [Dre] listened to it off the board in the studio. 
He'd cut it together, cut the reels, splice it in. He actually had to 
put it together piece by piece, by hand. Every song connected to the 
next song, to the next song, to the next song.
ALLEN GORDON (former editor, Rap Pages magazine): Dre 
had the talent to hear music and [say], "This needs a flute, harp 
strings, heavier drum track." That's an incredible talent, even if he 
can't read music himself.
SNOOP DOGG: I think The Chronic was perfect, but a lot 
of songs could have been on it that would have destroyed the vibe. If 
they didn't come out, Dre did it for a reason. A lot of that shit was 
spontaneous. But I did [another] song 15 times before I got it right. 
Had a toothache at the time and couldn't spit it out. He was, "Do it the
 next time, I don't like how it sounds. Do it again, you had too much 
energy." I'm like, this motherfucker is a precisionist.
JEFFREY JOLSON-COLBURN: The Chronic was a hit out of the box. ... Snoop had these incredible street creds and such a buzz behind him from the projects. 
CPO: The money started comin' in right after The Chronic. That's when the money started getting made.
SNOOP DOGG: The first family member I called when I heard my 
shit being played was my Pops. Because he'd seen me go to jail for 
selling dope. I don't think Pops believed in me. ... When The Chronic
 came out, I was sought out for interviews. I was very shy, and I'd hold
 my head down and didn't want to look at the camera. I didn't know what 
to expect. I had to learn how to conduct myself and not explode on every
 question I didn't like. Just take my time and listen. If I just be me, 
it'll be all right. ... 
The first time I performed songs from The Chronic was with Dre
 in a small concert in Compton. And man, these motherfuckers were 
singing every word of the songs. And that made me feel -- damn, my life 
is right here.
VIRGIL ROBERTS: We had originally thought we'd be able to distribute the record with Sony. But Sony refused to distribute The Chronic. 
SAM ANSON (L.A. Weekly reporter): Because of the crazy 
things going on around Death Row and their wariness of the contractual 
status of Dr. Dre, [Sony] didn't want to get the deal done. 
MICHAEL HARRIS: Because of Eazy-E's insistence that he had been wronged, and robbed of his artists, Sony chose not to be part of the lawsuits.
VIRGIL ROBERTS: And so we decided to distribute The Chronic
 independently. But to put a record out independently, you need a video.
 Griffey said to Suge, "I don't have the money, let's raise the money." 
[Later] Dick and I met with [Interscope executives] Jimmy Iovine and 
David Cohen. We played them The Chronic, and they said they were interested.
KEVIN POWELL (writer): Jimmy Iovine had to pay off Ruthless Records, Eazy-E, Jerry Heller, and have The Chronic distributed through Priority Records.
DOUG YOUNG: Eazy was getting like 25 or 50 cents a copy for Dre's Chronic album.  
Nonetheless, with The Chronic, Death Row was now a bona fide success. 
HANK CALDWELL (former Death Row Records president): Word of 
mouth is everything, and Death Row became really hip on the street. 
Every young, black entertainer wanted to be part of it, so there was no 
problem finding talent. There was an understanding at Death Row that  
[artists] weren't getting at the major companies. Kids would come in and
 audition right off the street.
SUGE  KNIGHT: I ain't gonna throw you "Let's do lunch." I 
ain't with all that. I'm still from the ghetto. I still got a house in 
Compton. I may not be there every night, but I still got a house there. I
 go there and hang out and feel it. That's where the talent's at. 'Cause
 when people stay away too long, they get scared of it. There's no goin'
 back. How I'm gonna run from something I'm part of?
DICK GRIFFEY: I was talking to an ambassador from South Africa
 and his daughter. Very eloquent, articulate people. Very educated. And 
these people had bought into it. Suge was a cult hero around the world.
JON CLARK (former Motown Records executive):  Basically, it's 
the same thing Motown did. They took the mindset, spirit, dreams, hopes,
 wishes and thoughts of the people of a time period and set it to music.
DOUG YOUNG: Death Row was bombin' out of control. All you had 
to do was tell a girl you worked at Death Row Records -- anything you 
want. Any shop you go into, "I work for Death Row" -- anything you want.
 Any record store you go into, "I work for Death Row" -- you come back 
with some promo goods. There was no club, no guest list you weren't on. 
"We'll fly you here, we'll do this for you, that for you. We'll give you
 clothes."
JEFFREY JOLSON-COLBURN: Death Row at its peak was making about $150 million a year. For a tiny label, that was a shocking amount.
ALLEN GORDON: There was no control [over spending] at Death Row. Rap Pages
 printed a story about BL Diamonds, where Death Row got all their 
jewelry. And we have the invoices of all the jewelry that was purchased 
there on credit. And you go down the list, and it's "bracelet for wife 
No. 1 ... cut gold, diamond cufflinks..." And after a while the artists 
started going there and ordering their own jewelry without the consent 
of [attorney David] Kenner, Knight or [Death Row publicist] George 
Pryce, any figure of authority. Suge Knight probably doesn't even know 
that all these artists went down there and started purchasing this 
jewelry. 
GEORGE PRYCE: The day that I [went in to interview with 
Knight] he said, 'Look I'm gonna interview you when I can, but it may 
take a while. So I sat for seven days in the lobby, between all of these
 huge hip-hop types. ... I sat for seven days -- a solid week. ... On 
the last day I finally saw Suge. He came down the aisle and said, 
"Hello, how are you? I'm gonna see you in a few minutes, but first I've 
got to have a staff meeting. As a matter of fact, come on in to the 
staff meeting." So when the meeting was called to order, the first words
 out of his mouth were "Everybody, I'd like you to meet George Pryce -- 
he's the new publicist, the head of communications and media relations 
for Death Row Records." No contract, no conversation about salary, 
nothing. But I knew it was gonna be OK and that's just the way Suge is.
GREGORY ATRON (talent manager): Death Row didn't put out a whole lotta records -- they just sold a lot of the ones that they put out.
ALLEN GORDON: And Death Row's street teams were the best. There wasn't a major urban community where they didn't know Doggystyle or [have] Dogg Food stickers posted up or even Chronic stickers when this was goin' on. I remember being in Omaha, Neb., and seeing a Chronic sticker on the lamppost. 'Cause I didn't think anybody in Nebraska listened to hip-hop.
JEFFREY JOLSON-COLBURN: Radio couldn't play gangsta rap; the 
four-letter words kept it off conventional radio and conventional TV. 
Plus, there was Death Row's name, a gruesome little logo of somebody 
sitting on death row with a hood over his head. That helped. 
Eventually, Dr. Dre began having trouble focusing in the raucous Death Row environment. 
UNKNOWN DJ: Suge Knight felt the need to have a court around him, and I don't think Dre felt comfortable with that.
FRANK ALEXANDER (Tupac bodyguard): Tupac and Dr. Dre was fine,
 in the beginning. You didn't see any problems. [But] from the time I 
worked there in '95 up to '96, Dr. Dre had only been in the studio 
twice. 'Pac took offense to that.
TUPAC SHAKUR***: He wasn't producing shit. All the niggas were
 producing the beats on my album. All the niggas were doing the beats 
and Dre was getting the credit.
SUGE KNIGHT: Dre wasn't doing the tracks, and Dre didn't write the lyrics.
KEVIN POWELL: Tupac started becoming the mouthpiece for Suge and started dissing Dre.
TUPAC SHAKUR: [Dre] is a dope producer, but he ain't worked in
 years. I'm out here in the streets, whooping niggas' asses, starting 
wars and shit, and this nigga's taking three years to do one song.
SNOOP DOGG: It was not a work atmosphere anymore. Success had 
kicked in. We were stars, and motherfuckers just loved being around us. 
And bringing bullshit around us. Dre wasn't for that.
DR. DRE: I just didn't like some of the things that were going on. There was nothing being done to stop it. 
SNOOP DOGG: Dre likes to work in an environment where you can 
create. [Where] everybody's on the creative atmosphere and not about 
what's goin' on in the 'hood, how many niggas you shot and how much shit
 you did. He didn't want that.
JEWELL: Suge took over the company. I don't think Dre wanted to be a yes-man for somebody. He wanted his own situation.
JEFFREY JOLSON-COLBURN: Dre says, "I want out of this world. I want to form Aftermath, where I'm not part of Death Row. I want to live."
NATE DOGG: When Dre left Death Row Records, that was the 
biggest shock. Because I was real confused how you start a label and 
then leave the label. I figured if you had a problem with 
someone ... you'd make them leave, and you'd go on with what you're 
doing.  I guess he learned it wasn't his label.
SUGE KNIGHT: Dre's departure wasn't a loss. If you've got a 
multimillion dollar company -- maybe worth a billion dollars -- and you 
own 100 percent and don't have a partner, then you don't have to give 
him nothing but his walking papers. That's great.
ALLEN GORDON: To give up 50 percent of your label and move 
from a dangerous situation, which Death Row was becoming, was a smart 
move for him.
Though few imprints have been as successful, Death Row's 
hit-making run was short. After the departure of Dre, Tupac Shakur 
became its marquee artist, but his 1996 murder plunged the label into 
chaos. 
Knight was sent to prison for a parole violation and was suspected of orchestrating the hit on Tupac's rival Notorious B.I.G.
Snoop Dogg departed for Master P's No Limit label, while Dr. Dre's Aftermath has become one of hip-hop's most successful imprints, introducing artists such as Eminem, 50 Cent and Kendrick Lamar. 
The 6 million copies sold of Dre's 1999 album 2001 eclipsed even the triple-platinum The Chronic. It is the latter album, however, whose influence is still felt most strongly today. 
*Dr. Dre quotes taken from a 1999 Behind the Music episode
**Suge Knight quotes taken from a 1996 BET interview
***Tupac Shakur quotes taken from a 1996 U.K. radio interview
 source - http://blogs.laweekly.com/westcoastsound/2012/11/making_of_the_chronic_dre_death_row.php?page=3
I bought the Chronic, and loved it, that's why this article is so interesting - thanks for puttin it up there
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