
Dre is only listed as an executive producer, his influence is all over the album, as Dat Nigga Daz faithfully reproduces all of the elements of Dre's trademark G-funk style - slow, loping beats, deep, elastic rhythms, the occasional wail from a female singer, and layers of cheap, whiny synthesizers. Dre's The Chronic, following Snoop Doggy Dogg's Doggystyle and the Murder Was the Case soundtrack. Essentially, Dogg Food is the third rewrite of Dr. It's ironic that Dogg Food caused so much controversy, because, musically, the album is a very conservative piece of gangsta rap. Of course, that didn't stop the album from being released - Interscope signed a distribution deal with Priority Records. Not only did the company agree, it also sold off all of its interests in Interscope Records.
ScHoolboy Q featured Tha Dogg Pound on the slinky “Big Body” off his 2016 Blank Face LP.Before the release of tha Dogg Pound's debut album, Dogg Food, various conservative organizations attacked the record for being exceedingly violent and vulgar, pressuring Warner Bros. The pair beefed for a few years before reuniting for Dillinger & Young Gotti II-credited to D.P.G.-in 2005. Daz and Kurupt dropped their debut solo albums in 1998 and split up in 2002.
Daz lent his smooth production to the standouts “2 Of Amerikaz Most Wanted,” "Ambitionz Az A Ridah,” and "I Ain't Mad At Cha.”
In 1996, Tha Dogg Pound contributed heavily to 2Pac’s All Eyez On Me, the final album released during the rapper’s lifetime. The momentum led into their 1995 debut album, Dogg Food, reaching No. Their song “What Would You Do?,” off the Murder Was The Case soundtrack, earned a Grammy nomination for Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group.
They turned up on Death Row’s soundtracks for numerous ’90s films, including Above The Rim, Murder Was The Case, and Poetic Justice, starring 2Pac. By the time they appeared on Snoop Dogg’s 1993 debut, Doggystyle, they’d formally come together as Tha Dogg Pound. Before they were a duo, Daz and Kurupt both guested on Dr. Featuring Kurupt and Daz Dillinger, the West Coast hip-hop duo The Dogg Pound found fame as featured guests and headline artists during the ’90s heyday of Death Row Records.