Snoop Dogg and Tha Dogg Pound team up with The Lady Of Rage and RBX for a DJ Premier-produced posse clip that looks back at the glory days of Death Row.
On Friday (May 31), the West Coast duo released their long-awaited ninth studio album, WAWG (We All We Got). A few other songs worthy of praise include “Who Da Hardest?,” which features a bar-heavy performance by the aforementioned veteran.
“Kuruput, Daz [Dillinger]Snoop, RBX mark the goal / I’m a DPG demi-goddess, I’m the hardest,” Rage dished on the song alongside her longtime collaborator, with whom she has released numerous tracks dating back to her ‘s solo debut follows the 1994 single “Afro Puffs,” which featured Snoop in both a regular version and a classic extended remix.
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The new album is co-released by Gala Records and Death Row Records.
“Gala Music is at the forefront of bringing established and emerging artists into Web3 and introducing them to the many opportunities that exist in this space,” Gala Records President Leila Steinberg said in a press release announcing the new album. “We are extremely excited to partner with Death Row Records Collaborating with legendary hip-hop group Tha Dogg Pound to release their first Web3 album!”
Last year, Snoop made a surprise acquisition of Death Row Records and subsequently welcomed the label’s iconic catalog back to streaming.
In early 2023, the Long Beach native surprised fans by announcing that the gangster rap label’s record would be returning to the streaming service.
The catalog includes key rap songs from the ’90s such as Dr. Dre’s “The Chronic,” Snoop Dogg’s “Doggystyle” and Tha Doggfather, 2Pac’s “All Eyez On Me” and The Don Kluminati: The 7 Day Theory and Tha Dogg Pound “Dogg Food”.
Fans can also revisit the soundtracks for “Above the Rim,” “Murder Was the Case” and “Gridlock’d,” as well as compilations like “Death Row Greatest Hits” and “Christmas on Death Row.”
The “Vato” hitmaker appeared on DJ Hed and Chuck Dizzle’s Home Grown Radio podcast this week and revealed that things aren’t going well between him and Daz Dillinger. However, they quickly put aside their differences following the death of Snoop’s Bing Worthington earlier this year.
“My brother passed away, and one thing about my brother is that he loved Daz so much. He loved us being together,” he explained.
He then had a phone call with Daz that facilitated the healing process that ultimately led to WAWG



