Real Name:
Eazy E - Eric Wright
Dr. Dre - André Romell Young
Ice Cube - Oshea Jackson
MC Ren - Lorenzo Patterson
DJ Yella - Antoine Carraby
The D.O.C. - Tracy Curry
Arabian Prince - Mike Lezan
With the double-platinum-selling Straight Outta Compton, N.W.A brought gangsta rap into the mainstream. The album was among the first to offer an insider's perspective of the violence and brutality in gang-ridden South Central L.A. With songs like "Fuck tha Police" and "Gangsta Gangsta" set in a chaotic swirl of siren and gunshot sounds, it also foreshadowed the 1992 L.A. riots.
In 1986 O'Shea “Ice Cube” Jackson, born and raised in a two-parent, middle-class home in South Central - and always more interested in music and books than in gangs - met Andre “Dr. Dre” Young, who shared Cube’s passion for writing rap songs. The two started writing for Eric “Eazy-E” Wright, a former drug dealer who’d started Ruthless Records with his profits; Eazy needed material for a group he’d signed to the label, HBO. When HBO rejected Cube and Dre’s “Boyz-n-the-Hood,” about the South Central town of Compton, Eazy-E decided to record the song himself. Under his direction, the three started working together as Niggaz With Attitude (N.W.A).
After N.W.A’s first collection, Cube took a year off to study drafting at the Phoenix Institute of Technology. When he returned in 1988, the group finished Eazy’s solo album and started work onStraight Outta Compton. Released in 1989, the album sold 750,000 copies even before N.W.A embarked on a tour. In the meantime, a media storm had developed over the controversial “Fuck tha Police,” resulting in a “warning letter” from the FBI to the group’s distributor, Priority Records.
After the tour, Cube got into a financial dispute with N.W.A’s manager, Jerry Heller, who Cube claimed had cheated him out of royalties. The two settled out of court in 1990, and Cube moved on to a successful solo career. N.W.A continued recording and selling records but fell out of critical favor. In June 1991 the group made history again when, in the face of strong criticism from politicians and bannings from some retail chains,EFIL4ZAGGIN(“Niggaz 4 Life” backward) reached #1 pop, #2 R&B two weeks after its release.
Members of N.W.A made the police blotter often during the early ’90s, mainly for assault charges that ended up being dismissed or settled. Dr. Dre was involved in the most notorious case when he was charged with attacking the female host of a television rap show in 1991; he pleaded no contest and paid an out-of-court settlement to the host. In 1992 Dre was arrested for assaulting record producer Damon Thomas and later plead guilty to assault on a police officer, eventually serving “house arrest” and wearing a police-monitoring ankle bracelet. Eazy-E also raised eyebrows in the rap community when he attended a fund-raising lunch for President George Bush, donating $2,500 for the privilege.
By early 1992 N.W.A was over, its members scattered to solo careers. Dre left both the group and Ruthless to cofound Death Row Records with Marion “Suge” Knight; Eazy-E later claimed in a lawsuit that Knight had negotiated Dre’s exit with the help of baseball bats and pipes. MC Ren’s Kizz My Black Azz EP (#12 pop, #10 R&B, 1992) went platinum. But aside from Ice Cube, Dr. Dre has had the most chart success: In 1993 The Chronic (#3 pop, #1 R&B) went triple platinum, appeared on a number of critics’ year-end top-10 lists, and spawned several hits. “Nuthin’ But a ‘G’ Thang” (#2 pop, #1 R&B) and “Dre Day” (#8 pop, #6 R&B) featured the rapper Snoop Doggy Dogg, who later in the year had his own hit album (produced by Dre), DoggyStyle (#1 pop, #1 R&B). As a sign of lingering bad feelings, Dre also used his solo album and accompanying videos to ridicule Eazy. In October 1993 Eazy responded with It’s On (Dr. Dre) 187um Killa (#5 pop, #1 R&B). Eazy also found success with Ruthless nurturing the band Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, with whom Eazy recorded the single “Foe tha Love of $” (#41 pop, #33 R&B, 1995).
Two years later, Eazy-E split with longtime manager Jerry Heller. Communication among the former N.W.A members quickly improved. Soon Dr. Dre, Eazy-E, Ice Cube, and the others were talking about an N.W.A reunion project. Though he had been the first to leave the group for a very successful solo career, Ice Cube later expressed regret that N.W.A had never built on its early potential. Then, in 1995, Eazy-E died from complications of AIDS. Both Dre and Cube visited him in the hospital shortly before he died. The Ruthless impresario was married two days before his death, and his estate quickly became mired in a barrage of lawsuits filed on behalf of business associates and heirs (which included nine children by seven different women). A final solo album, Str8 Off tha Streetz of Muthaphukkin Compton (#3 pop, #1 R&B), was released in 1996.
At Death Row, Dre enjoyed continued popular success, both as house producer and as a performer in a duet with Tupac Shakur on “California Love” (#6 pop, 1996). But Dre unexpectedly left Death Row that same year and soon formed Aftermath Entertainment (in association with Interscope). By now an outspoken critic of the highly publicized West Coast–East Coast hip-hop feud, Dre’s first post–Death Row single was “Been There, Done That.” Dre also discovered a white Detroit rapper named Eminem, whose Dre-produced albums made him as controversial as N.W.A had been a decade before. As Dre prepared to release his followup to The Chronic, he filed suit against Death Row for copyright infringement over the label’s unauthorized release of Suge Knight Presents: Chronic 2000, a compilation album of various artists that Dre felt unfairly “used” his “Chronic” title. (He later dropped the suit.) Dre’s own 2001 (#2 pop, #1 R&B, 1999) featured such guests as MC Ren, Snoop Dogg, and Eminem.
The long-rumored N.W.A reunion finally began to take shape that same year. Ice Cube, Dr. Dre, and MC Ren recorded “Hell Low,” the opening track on Cube’s War & Peace vol. 2 (The Peace Disc), and a new track credited to N.W.A also appeared on the soundtrack to Cube’s film Next Friday. That was followed by a national arena tour in 2000 with Dre, Ren, Snoop Dogg, Warren G., and Eminem. Separately and in joint interviews, the former N.W.A partners talked up a proposed album called Not These Niggas Again, but by 2001 any further studio recordings were not, in Dre’s opinion, strong enough to release.
Album
N.W.A. and the Posse Album
- Boyz-N-The-Hood
- 8 Ball
- Dunk the Funk
- A Bitch is a Bitch
- Drink it Up
- Panic Zone
- L.A. is the Place
- Dopeman
- Tuffest Man Alive
- Fat Girl
- 3 the Hard Way
Straight Outta Compton Album
- Straight Outta Compton
- Fuck Tha Police
- Gangsta Gangsta
- If it Ain't Ruff
- Parental Discretion Iz Advised
- 8 Ball (Remix)
- Something Like That
- Express Yourself
- Compton's N the House
- I Ain't Tha 1
- Dopeman (Remix)
- Quiet on Tha Set
- Something 2 Dance 2
100 Miles and Runnin' Album
- 100 Miles and Runnin'
- Just Don't Bite It
- Sa Prize, Pt. 2
- Real Niggaz
- Kamurshol
Efil4zaggin Album
- Prelude
- Real Niggaz Don't Die
- Niggaz 4 Life
- Protest
- Appetite for Destruction
- Don't Drink That Wine
- Alwayz Into Somethin'
- Message to B.A.
- Real Niggaz
- To Kill a Hooker
- One Less Bitch
- Findum Fuckum & Flee
- Automobile
- She Swallowed It
- I'd Rather Fuck You
- Approach to Danger
- 1-900-2-Compton
- The Dayz of Wayback
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