Snoop Biography
No
other rapper has been able to carve such a distinct niche in hip hop's diverse
and expansive history as Snoop Dogg. His flow is like a Southern breeze on a
lazy Sunday afternoon - soothing in its feel, sturdy in its power. We've all
witnessed the curly-headed, lyrical phenomenon from 21st Street in Long Beach
evolve and fortify into a grown man, now just as concerned with his business as
he is with his lyrics - his game as healthy and expanding as his straightened
head of hair.
The Dogg father is now bringing his collection of classics to arenas across
America as a headliner on Dr. Dre's "Up in Smoke 2000" tour. Snoop
will join Tray Deee and Goldie Loc of his newly formed group Tha Eastsidaz,
Eminem, Warren G, Xzibit, Nate Dogg, Kurupt, Ice Cube, Mack 10, WC, and others
on a tentative 39-city, seven-week tour to show audiences across the nation how
the West coast rocks.
His set includes joints from his upcoming No Limit/Priority Records album, Tha
Last Meal, due in stores this fall and featuring production from Dr. Dre,
Battlecat, Meech Wells, Timbaland, Jellyroll, Fredwreck and Swizz Beats, and
Snoop recently completed shooting his long-awaited New Line cinema produced
horror-flick "Bones," set to hit theaters later this year. In perhaps
his most rewarding accomplishment, Snoop has started his own label, Doggystyle
Records, which offers its artists 100 percent of their publishing rights.
"You won't see that in no record label that I've dealt with," says
Snoop. "Me giving it to the artist is something special because I feel like
if you write your songs and create that atmosphere, you should be compensated
for it." Doggystyle artists include Tha Eastsidaz, Kokane, Butch Cassidy
and a female rap trio, Doggy's Angels. The label also has a film division
entitled Snoopadelic Films, another gratifying achievement considering Snoop's
personal love of motion pictures. The company's first release will be "The
Eastsidaz," a straight-to-video film featuring himself, Tray Deee and
Goldie Loc.
For fans interested in Snoop's long and bumpy path to the present day, Snoop
detailed his life story in his autobiography, "Tha Doggfather."
Written with Davin Scay,the project required a self-analysis that few people are
willing to undertake. "I had to go back to my childhood and the things that
made me upset, and made me who Iam," says Snoop. "I also had to expose
the bad things about myself that caused me to have that bad reputation when I
first came out. But it's all a part of life. I was willing to reveal it and
share it with the public."
Between his numerous projects, Snoop manages to squeeze in a weekly radio show
at The Beat in Los Angeles that has just picked up national syndication in 14
U.S. markets and counting. His air-shift sizzles with his favorite old-school
r&b and hip hop joints, as well as world premiere releases of his own
material.
Snoop Dogg has already accomplished what many rap artists will never achieve.
The sheer resiliency of his 28-year hustle has made hip hop's own "King of
All Media" currently available in record stores, movie theaters, book
stores, syndicated radio, and recently in concert, C-walking across a stage near
you. Snoop admits his newfound focus on matters other than rhyming was sparked
by Master P taught me," says Snoop. "Now I'm taking what he taught me,
putting it to use with my personal knowledge and just trying to be the best
artist in the game."
Born Calvin Broadus, October 20, 1972, Long Beach, California
SNOOP'S
PICTURE