Delmar Drew Arnaud[1] (born May 25,[2] 1973 in Long Beach, California),
better known by his stage name Daz Dillinger (formerly Dat Nigga
Daz) is an American hip hop producer and rapper mostly known for
his membership in the rap duo Tha Dogg Pound, with Kurupt, and his
work with Death Row Records. He is the cousin of Snoop Dogg, Nate
Dogg, Lil' ½ Dead, Mr. Malik, Lil' C-Style, Butch Cassidy,
Ray J, Brandy and RBX.
Daz began his career on Death Row Records as a producer for co-founder
Suge Knight's then-girlfriend, Paradise. He was signed to the label
and subsequently began working with Dr. Dre on the breakthrough west
coast album, The Chronic;[3] during its recording, he met and grew
close to Kurupt, whom he would soon work with professionally. The two
formed Tha Dogg Pound for Doggystyle, the debut album of the record
label's up-and-coming star Snoop Dogg. The critically-acclaimed album,
as well as their later single "What Would You Do?", saw Tha
Dogg Pound partake in the rivalry between Dr. Dre and former N.W.A.
groupmate Eazy-E, by dissing artists on Eazy's Ruthless Records.
Dillinger was more heavily involved in Doggystyle than was his groupmate;
while it was produced and mixed by Dre, Arnaud was featured on one
track and received co-production credit on two ("Serial Killa" and "For
All My Niggaz and Bitches"). Following its release, Daz and Kurupt
put out their debut group album, Dogg Food, to rave reviews and platinum
sales. While the duo dissed Ruthless act Bone Thugs-N-Harmony on the
album, Dogg Food also saw the duo engage in yet another conflict, this
time the beef Suge and new signee 2Pac initiated against Bad Boy Entertainment's
Puff Daddy and Notorious B.I.G.; Daz and Kurupt would expand the feud
to include Capone-N-Noreaga, Tragedy Khadafi and Mobb Deep with their
Snoop-assisted single "New York, New York."
[edit] Head producer, All Eyez on Me & Retaliation, Revenge & Get
Back
As the intercoastal rivalry escalated, and Suge Knight's increasingly
intense strong-arm tactics entered the studio, head producer Dr. Dre
steadily grew resentful of the label's dangerous atmosphere. Beginning
with Dogg Food, which Daz produced, Dre no longer produced whole Death
Row albums; in his latter days as in-house producer, he worked only
with 2Pac, producing three tracks (California Love, which was originally
supposed to appear on the Aftermath compilation album, California Love
Remix, and Can't C Me) for the rapper's definitive album All Eyez on
Me. Even before Dre left the label to found his own Aftermath Entertainment,
Arnaud effectively took over as head producer, crafting most of the
double-album's first disc and providing beats for Snoop Dogg's sophomore
effort, Tha Doggfather, from which Dre's production was absent. His
status as head producer was made official once Dre left, and continued
on even after 2Pac's murder and the artist-exodus it initiated. During
his tenure heading the label's sound, Daz contributed production to
the Gridlock'd soundtrack, Lady of Rage's Necessary Roughness, and
Nate Dogg's G-Funk Classics, Vol. 1. His production would also pop
up on the unofficial Snoop Dogg release Dead Man Walkin put out by
Suge in 2001, after Daz himself had left the label.
Dillinger went on to put out his own solo album, Retaliation, Revenge
and Get Back on Death Row in 1998; Nate Dogg, Kurupt and Snoop had
already left the label, followed shortly thereafter by Daz himself.
During this time a short-lived beef sparked between Daz and Snoop,
regarding the latter's words against Suge Knight and the former's status
at the label and disses inherent in the album, which Snoop Dogg later
dropped out of respect for his cousin.[4]
[edit] Off Death Row
[edit] Solo career & feud with Kurupt
After ending his tenure at Death Row, Arnaud would go on to produce
for acts like Kurupt, Soopafly, and B-Legit; he put out the album R.A.W.
in 2000, the flagship release for his own D.P.G. Recordz, which would
for some time function as a vehicle for releasing solo albums. He and
Kurupt united in 2001 for a second album, Dillinger & Young Gotti,
which received mixed reviews, under the name D.P.G. (as Suge still
owned rights to the name 'Tha Dogg Pound' at the time). The group unity
was short-lived, as Kurupt would subsequently re-sign with Death Row,
prompting his former groupmate to diss him several times in song and
interviews.[5][6] Daz dissed Death Row with "Catch U In The Club", "U
Ain't Shit" and a skit called "A Message to Ricardo Brown".
Kurupt respond with "No Vaseline Part 2." The feud carried
on from 2002 to 2005, while Dillinger released several solo efforts,
including a 'DPGC' album with Snoop Dogg, Soopafly and Bad Azz and
Tha Dogg Pound Gangsta LP on his own.
[edit] Reconciliation & upcoming projects
In 2005, Daz and Kurupt reconciled their differences at a west coast
unity event hosted by Snoop Dogg;[7] Kurupt proceeded to leave Death
Row a second time, procuring rights to the name of Tha Dogg Pound and
re-forming the duo with his former partner, who on his part ended his
brief tenure at Jermaine Dupri's So So Def. The duo immediately commenced
to releasing albums, including Dillinger & Young Gotti II: The
Saga Continuez, the Let'z Ryde Tonite EP and Cali iz Active with Snoop
Dogg as the DPG.[3] Their next proper album came in the form of 2007's
Dogg Chit, and then in 2009 with "That Was Then This Is Now".
In the works for Daz are two Dogg Pound releases, one entitled 100
Wayz--formerly Westcoast Aftershocc--, which is to be released in 2010
through Snoop Dogg's Doggystyle records, and one produced in conjunction
with Pete Rock.[8] August 1, 2008, Daz Dillinger offered the new owners
of Death Row Records to record videos for Dogg Food; he also plans
to repackage and release unreleased material.[9]
[edit] Discography
Main article: Daz Dillinger discography
[edit] Studio albums
* 1998: Retaliation, Revenge and Get Back
* 2000: R.A.W.
* 2002: This Is the Life I Lead
* 2003: DPGC: U Know What I'm Throwin' Up
* 2004: I Got Love in These Streetz
* 2005: Tha Dogg Pound Gangsta LP
* 2005: Gangsta Crunk
* 2006: So So Gangsta
* 2007: Gangsta Party
* 2008: Only on the Left Side
* 2009: Public Enemiez
* 2010: Matter of Dayz
* 2011: D.A.Z. (April 19)[10]
[edit] Compilation albums
* 2001: Who Ride wit Us: Tha Compalation, Vol. 1
* 2002: To Live and Die in CA
* 2002: Who Ride wit Us: Tha Compalation, Vol. 2
* 2008: Who Ride wit Us: Tha Compalation, Vol. 3
* 2009: Who Ride wit Us: Tha Compalation, Vol. 4
[edit] Collaboration albums
* 2001: Long Beach 2 Fillmoe (with JT the Bigga Figga)
* 2001: Game for Sale (with JT the Bigga Figga)
* 2003: Southwest (with Nuwine)
[edit] EPs
* 2001: Makaveli & Dillinger Don't Go 2 Sleep (with Makaveli)
[edit] Mixtapes
* 2004: DPG: Till The Day I Die Mixtape
* 2005: So So Gangsta - The Mixtape
* 2005: West Coast Gangstas - Starring: Tha Dogg Pound (Hosted by DJ Kurupt)
* 2009: Dillinger & Makaveli - Tribute: Streetz of LA Special Edition (Hosted
by DJ Nik Bean)